Knowledge representation: logical, philosophical and computational foundations
Knowledge representation: logical, philosophical and computational foundations
Multi-modal Reasoning in Diabetic Patient Management
AIMDM '99 Proceedings of the Joint European Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Medicine and Medical Decision Making
Case-Based Reasoning in the Care of Alzheimer's Disease Patients
ICCBR '01 Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning: Case-Based Reasoning Research and Development
Medical applications in case-based reasoning
The Knowledge Engineering Review
Pellet: A practical OWL-DL reasoner
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
Pattern Recognition Letters
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Although functionality and disease classifications are available thanks to initiatives such as the “international classification of functioning, disability and health”, the “systematized nomenclature of medicine - clinical terms” and the “international classification of diseases”, a formal model of rehabilitation interventions has not been defined yet. This model can have a fundamental role in the design of computer-based decision support in rehabilitation. Some initiatives such as the “international classification of health interventions” are in development, but their scope is overly general to cope with the specificities that characterize rehabilitation. The aim of this work is to represent knowledge in order to carry out diagnosis and personalization of activities in cases of people with functional diversity. To define the diagnosis and activity personalization, a methodology has been developed to extract standardized concepts from clinical scales and the literature.