Eighth Clinical and Translational Science Ontology Workshop
Announcement
The Clinical and Translational Science Ontology Group (CTSOG) invites you to join us March 16-18, 2022 in Orlando, Florida to discuss AI, Complex Systems in Biomedicine, and the role of ontology both in tempering the expectations of AI and advancing it to goals it can achieve. For example, we hear things all the time like “Google’s deep-learning program for determining the 3D shapes of proteins stands to transform biology, say scientists.” An optimism of this sort as to the potential of AI is shared by many working in the field of clinical and translational science. The purpose of this workshop is to explore the basis for this optimism, by looking at successes and failures of AI in different areas of biomedicine.
Example topics include:
- Can NLP build useful medical ontologies?
- Machine learning and the role of ontology
- AI and team science
- AI and medical diagnosis and clinical decision support
- The limits of AI when applied to complex systems
- Complex systems and the replication crisis
- AI in therapeutic decision making
- AI in modelling cell biology
- AI in modelling systems biology
- AI-driven cell ontology
- The challenges of implementing AI in healthcare
Persons who are interested in participating can register here. If you have any questions, please contact William Hogan at hoganwr@ufl.edu.
Organizers
Workshop Co-organizers:
Bill Hogan, Jobst Landgrebe, Barry Smith
CTSOG Co-chairs:
Bill Hogan (University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL), hoganwr@ufl.edu
Barry Smith (University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY), phismith@buffalo.edu
Sponsors
- University of Florida Clinical and Translational Science Institute Biomedical Informatics Program
Date
March 16 (Wednesday) - 18 (Friday), 2022
Venue
Embassy Suites by Hilton Orlando Lake Buena Vista South, Kissimmee, FL (20 minutes from Orlando airport).
To reserve a room in our block, click here. The room rate is available 3 days pre and post meeting in case you'd like to stay in Florida and enjoy the warm weather a little longer.
Registration
Registration is free, but we absolutely need you to register for planning purposes.
To register for the meeting, click here.
Schedule
Outline of Agenda (starting and stopping times for official agenda each day in bold)
Tuesday March 15th
Pre-Workshop Informal Meet & Greet: We will meet between 7pm and 10pm ...
Wednesday March 16th
9a-12p Working session on the ontology of social determinants of health
We will discuss three topics of ongoing work motivated by key SDoH use cases: occupation, social categories such as ethnic and gender categories, and one TBD.
12p-1p Lunch (available to all, not just working session participants)
1p-1:15p Welcome and overview
1:15p-3:15p AI and the Ontology of Complex Systems
- Opening Tutorial by Jobst Landgrebe, Cognotekt GmbH, co-sponsored by the Working Group on Artificial Intelligence and Complex Systems
- Abstract: “Google’s deep-learning program for determining the 3D shapes of proteins stands to transform biology, say scientists.” An optimism of this sort as to the potential of AI is shared by many working in the field of clinical and translational science. The purpose of this tutorial is to explore the basis for this optimism, by looking at successes and failures of AI in different areas of biomedicine.
Potential topics to be explored are:
- - Can NLP build useful medical ontologies?
- - Machine learning and the role of ontology
- - AI and team science
- - AI and medical diagnosis and clinical decision support
- - The limits of AI when applied to complex systems
- - Complex systems and the replication crisis
- - AI in therapeutic decision making
- - AI in modelling cell biology
- - AI in modelling systems biology
- - AI-driven cell ontology
- - The challenges of implementing AI in healthcare
The tutorial will focus on the question of what domains of medicine will benefit most from AI and how AI will impact the way we work in research and medical care.
Jobst Landgrebe is the founder and managing director of Cognotekt, an AI company based in Cologne, Germany, focusing on the creation of structured data from natural language text. Dr Landgrebe is an MD with a background in biomedical informatics. He is the co-author, with Barry Smith, of Why Machines Will Never Rule the World. Artificial Intelligence without Fear, to be published by Routledge in summer 2022.
3:15-3:30 Break
3:30-5:00 Presentations
- Sivaram Arabandi, Clinical Decision Support, AI, and Ontology
- Abstract: In an increasingly polychronic patient population, acute and/or new diseases (e.g. Covid) present a distressing reality of our limitations in providing high quality clinical care. A key challenge for Clinical Decision Support has been in building executable clinical guideline models that can interpret patient data and provide insights at the point of care. In this talk, the CPG-on-FHIR open standards based framework for creating shareable and reusable Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPG) is described.
5:30p Reception
Thursday March 17th
9a-5p Presentations with breaks and lunch provided
Times TBD
- 9:00 Bill Hogan, Ontology for Social Determinants of Health with a Focus on Education
- Educational attainment is a key social determinant of health. I will report on classes developed in the Ontology of Medically Related Social Entities (OMRSE), where we defend a view that education imparts both knowledge (as an ICE) and the neurologically-based skills (some motor, some more intellectual) to apply it.
- 10:00 Jobst Landgrebe, The Replication Problem: Bad News for Medicine
- The 'replication problem' is a phrase to describe the inability of scientific communities to independently confirm the results of scientific work. It has plagued medicine as a positive science since its beginnings (Virchov and Pasteur). But it has become worse over the last 30 years and has massive consequences for healthcare practice and policy. This talk explains the reasons for the replication problem in medicine and why it is here to stay.
- 11:00 Coffee
- 11:15 Amelia Kahn, Definitions of Uncertainty
- A preliminary survey of meanings assigned by government agencies to estimative words in the domain of probability and statistics.
- 12:15 Lunch
- 13:00 Barry Smith, Capabilities
- Part 1 provides a general theory of capability as a universal intermediate between function and disposition in BFO. A capability is defined as a disposition in whose realisation some organism or group of organisms has an interest.
- Part 2 develops an ontology of language according to which a language is a capability of a linguistic community. The theory is tested in application to dialects, pidgins, and other vehicles of language change.
- 14:00 Clint Dowland, Language Capabilities and Clinical Demographics
- 15:00 Coffee
- 15:15 Matt Diller, The ontology of money with a view towards economic determinants of health
- Matters of money constitute an entire category of social determinants of health. To understand them, we first wish to define 'money'.
Friday March 18th
9a-12p Working session and discussion of next steps, closing
- Discussion and next steps
Rationale/Goals
Travel Fund Application
Participants
- Barry Smith, co-organizer, University at Buffalo
- Jobst Landgrebe, co-organizer and special guest
- William Hogan, co-organizer, University of Florida
- Sivaram Arabandi, Ontopro
- Sarah Bost, University of Florida
- Naomi Braun, University of Florida
- Matt Diller, University of Florida
- Clint Dowland, University of Florida
- Amelia Kahn, University at Buffalo
- Asiyah Lin, National Institutes of Health
- Alex Loiacono, University of Florida
- Jihad Obeid, Medical University of South Carolina
- Donny Weinbrenner, University of Florida