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Representing different views of acupuncture in a single ontology

Kay, S; Gao, Y

Authors

S Kay

Y Gao



Abstract

A major challenge for health informatics is to model the health-care domain knowledge into appropriate and useful ontologies. This is difficult, and modellers tend to simplify things dramatically by ignoring the fact that the health care domain encompasses a global perspective. The influx of complementary and alternative medicines from the East to the West, or indeed the ongoing colonialization of orthodox Western medicine into other non-western traditions requires multiple paradigms of delivering treatment to be considered simultaneously, side by side. Models and specifications need to be developed to encompass this richness and represent this complex reality so as to understand what the different concepts and terms in each tradition achieve. Acupuncture is used as a test case of cross-membership between two different paradigms. Here, we briefly outline requirements and answer possible objections to our approach before illustrating how we have modelled heterogeneous domain knowledge from different cultures, and across different paradigms, within a single ontology.

Citation

Kay, S., & Gao, Y. (2005). Representing different views of acupuncture in a single ontology. https://doi.org/10.1080/14639230500298925

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jun 1, 2005
Deposit Date Aug 6, 2007
Journal Medical Informatics and the Internet in Medicine
Print ISSN 14639238
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 30
Issue 2
Pages 143-150
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/14639230500298925
Keywords Allied health, computers in medicine, requirements, acupuncture, ontology, integration and alignment
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14639230500298925


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