Mark A. Musen
Stanford University
575 Papers
8.1K Citations
Mark A. Musen is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ontology (information science) & Open Biomedical Ontologies. The author has an hindex of 81, co-authored 553 publications. Previous affiliations of Mark A. Musen include University of Victoria & American College of Medical Informatics.
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Papers
Supporting rule system interoperability on the semantic web with SWRL
Martin J. O'Connor,Holger Knublauch,Samson W. Tu,Benjamin N. Grosof,Mike Dean,William Grosso,Mark A. Musen +6 more
- 06 Nov 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the development of a configurable interoperation environment for SWRL built in Protege-OWL, the most widely-used OWL development platform.
•Journal Article
Evaluating provider adherence in a trial of a guideline-based decision support system for hypertension.
Albert S. Chan,Robert W. Coleman,Susana B. Martins,Aneel A. Advani,Mark A. Musen,Hayden B. Bosworth,Eugene Z. Oddone,Michael G. Shlipak,Brian B. Hoffman,Mary K. Goldstein +9 more
TL;DR: The development of an advisory evaluation engine that automates the interpretation of clinician adherence with the DSS on multiple levels is described, facilitating the high volume of complex data analysis that is created in a clinical trial of a guideline-based DSS.
•Proceedings Article
Patient safety in guideline-based decision support for hypertension management: ATHENA DSS.
Mary K. Goldstein,Brian B. Hoffman,Robert W. Coleman,Samson W. Tu,Ravi D. Shankar,Martin J. O'Connor,Susana B. Martins,Aneel A. Advani,Mark A. Musen +8 more
- 01 Jan 2001
TL;DR: A categorization of possible errors that may arise in deploying a system designed to give guideline-based advice on prescribing drugs, an approach to anticipating these errors in an automated guideline system, and design features to minimize errors and thereby maximize patient safety are reported.
The Biomedical Resource Ontology (BRO) to enable resource discovery in clinical and translational research
Jessica D. Tenenbaum,Patricia L. Whetzel,Kent Anderson,Charles D. Borromeo,Ivo D. Dinov,Davera Gabriel,Beth Kirschner,Barbara Mirel,Tim Morris,Natasha Noy,Csongor Nyulas,David S. Rubenson,Paul Saxman,Harpreet Singh,Nancy B Whelan,Zach Wright,Brian D. Athey,Michael J. Becich,Geoffrey S. Ginsburg,Mark A. Musen,Kevin A. Smith,Alice F. Tarantal,Daniel L. Rubin,Peter Lyster +23 more
TL;DR: Through the RDS framework and its associated Biositemaps infrastructure, the BRO facilitates semantic search and discovery of biomedical resources, breaking down barriers and streamlining scientific research that will improve human health.
Integration and beyond: linking information from disparate sources and into workflow.
TL;DR: The review suggests that the ideas developed in the earlier generations have not been supplanted by ideas from subsequent generations, and the ideas represent a continuum of progress along the three dimensions of workflow, structure, and extraction.