Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
517547 | Journal of Biomedical Informatics | 2008 | 12 Pages |
ObjectiveInfobuttons are decision support tools that offer links to information resources based on the context of the interaction between a clinician and an electronic medical record (EMR) system. The objective of this study was to explore machine learning and web usage mining methods to produce classification models for the prediction of information resources that might be relevant in a particular infobutton context.DesignClassification models were developed and evaluated with an infobutton usage dataset. The performance of the models was measured and compared with a reference implementation in a series of experiments.MeasurementsLevel of agreement (κ) between the models and the resources that clinicians actually used in each infobutton session.ResultsThe classification models performed significantly better than the reference implementation (p < .0001). The performance of these models tended to decrease over time, probably due to a phenomenon known as concept drift. However, the performance of the models remained stable when concept drift handling techniques were used.ConclusionsThe results suggest that classification models are a promising method for the prediction of information resources that a clinician would use to answer patient care questions.