Emerging paradigms of cognition in medical decision-making
Journal of Biomedical Informatics
Acting with Technology: Activity Theory and Interaction Design (Acting with Technology)
Acting with Technology: Activity Theory and Interaction Design (Acting with Technology)
Information Systems Management
Bridging the Gap between Informal and Formal Guideline Representations
Proceedings of the 2006 conference on ECAI 2006: 17th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence August 29 -- September 1, 2006, Riva del Garda, Italy
Can Physicians Structure Clinical Guidelines? Experiments with a Mark-Up-Process Methodology
Knowledge Management for Health Care Procedures
Designing Systems for Health Promotion and Autonomy in Older Adults
INTERACT '09 Proceedings of the 12th IFIP TC 13 International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction: Part II
Towards personalized decision support in the dementia domain based on clinical practice guidelines
User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction
Bridging an asbru protocol to an existing electronic patient record
KR4HC'09 Proceedings of the 2009 AIME international conference on Knowledge Representation for Health-Care: data, Processes and Guidelines
AIME'11 Proceedings of the 13th conference on Artificial intelligence in medicine
Towards user-authored agent dialogues for assessment in personalised ambient assisted living
International Journal of Web Engineering and Technology
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This paper presents ACKTUS, a modeling tool for developing knowledge-based systems for the health domain, and an evaluation study of the system. The main purpose of the evaluation was to investigate whether the functionality and interaction design of ACKTUS was sufficiently intuitive for the domain experts to contribute with knowledge and to model the interaction design of the three end users' applications. Another purpose was to evaluate the applicability of the activity assessment protocol AAIMA for analysis. The study design was qualitative and formative, using observations and interviews with users to collect data. Three medical experts and two experts in occupational therapy participated, providing expertise in four different domains. The participants increased their understanding and skills during the evaluation period leading to improved knowledge-based applications. The AAIMA protocol proved to be useful and the results are fed into ongoing development work on developing the adaptive functionality of the ACKTUS systems.