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VINSIA: Visual Navigator for Surgical Information Access GQ Zhang1, PhD, Lingyun Luo1, PhD, James Rowbottom2, MD, John Craker2, MSN, Rong Xu1, PhD
1Case Western Reserve University, 2University Hospitals Case Medical Center, OH 44106
Abstract
We present a graphical, anatomy-driven navigationinterface called VINSIA for information delivery at thepoint of care. VINSIA has been developed by expandingSemantic MediaWiki (SMW [1]) to organize and classifyinformation using four axes: Anatomy, Location, Topicand User. These axes provide the building blocks forfaceted information access: any content item in VINSIAcan be accessed through any facet with limited need forentering a search term. Preliminary testing of a pilot sitedemonstrates the feasibility and advantages of VINSIAfor high-precision, quick navigation to targeted contentitems.
Methods
Extension
Conclusion
Information in VINSIA is categorized into four axes:Anatomy, Location, Topic and User. The Anatomy axiscaptures the anatomical hierarchy based e.g. on FMA. TheLocation axis captures physical locations in a hospital settingwhere the information is used or needed. The Topicaxis captures the specific types of information. Finally theUser axis captures a hierarchy of user permissions foraccess control.We use Semantic MediaWiki [1] as the backgroundframework for implementing the axes.
1. Click heart area
2. Cleck the Cardiac Valves picture
3. Click Aortic valve
4. Select topic
"Clinical Management"
VINSIA provides a high-precision, visual, anatomy basednavigation interface for clinicians in perioperative and critical care environments. The efficiency of VINSIA is measured by the total number of primitive computer interactions (key strokes andmouse drags or clicks). VINSIA is also semanticdriven because of its Semantic MediaWiki implementation environment. Importing high quality content into VINSIA is a critical prerequisite for fulfilling its function. To support this, VINSIA provides an interactive interface for qualified users to upload contents and tag them with categories in every facet.
For example, to access contents specifically on aortic valve, one clicks the “heart” on the “human body”, followed by the click sequence “cardiac valves” → “aortic valve”→ “clinical management” (Figure 2). This access mode only involves mouse clicking without any typing.
Figure 2: Anatomy Navigation System
Figure 6: Lungs page
Figure 3: Categories Figure 4: Upload file to different categories
Location
Anatomy
Topic
User Log In System
User Management
Information Upload
Information Access
Figure 1: Structure
Another way to get information in specific categories are by Category Search, as illustrated in Figure 5 below:
Figure 5: Category search
Except for Heart, the same procedure can be extended to other anatomies, Below is the Lungs page:
References
[1] http://www.semantic-mediawiki.org[2] Clinical Reference Sources at the Point of Care, Has theDream been realized? AMIA 2010 Annual SymposiumRoundtable.