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Dive into the research topics where Lynda Temal is active.

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Featured researches published by Lynda Temal.


Journal of Biomedical Informatics | 2008

Towards an ontology for sharing medical images and regions of interest in neuroimaging

Lynda Temal; Michel Dojat; Gilles Kassel; Bernard Gibaud

The goal of the NeuroBase project is to facilitate collaborative research in neuroimaging through a federated system based on semantic web technologies. The cornerstone and focus of this paper is the design of a common semantic model providing a unified view on all data and tools to be shared. For this purpose, we built a multi-layered and multi-components formal ontology. This paper presents two major contributions. The first is related to the general methodology we propose for building an application ontology based on consistent conceptualization choices provided by the DOLCE foundational ontology and core ontologies of domains that we reuse; the second concerns the domain ontology we designed for neuroimaging, which encompasses both the objective nature of image data and the subjective nature of image content, through annotations based on regions of interest made by agents (humans or computer programs). We report on realistic domain use-case queries referring to our application ontology.


Studies in health technology and informatics | 2010

Mapping BFO and DOLCE.

Lynda Temal; Arnaud Rosier; Olivier Dameron; Anita Burgun

Upper level ontologies are key technology for integrating heterogeneous information coming from different sources. DOLCE and BFO, are the favorite candidates which propose rigorous foundational principles to model any domain. The objective of the AKENATON project is to improve alert management and to support patient-centered medical decision in telecardiology. This requires to integrate information transmitted by implantable cardiac devices with clinical data extracted from patient health records. To achieve this goal, we have designed an ontology of telecardiology based on DOLCE. In order to integrate ontologies based on BFO such as FMA, we have developed a framework for mapping BFO and DOLCE categories in terms of equivalence and subsumption between categories.


Europace | 2016

Personalized and automated remote monitoring of atrial fibrillation

Arnaud Rosier; Philippe Mabo; Lynda Temal; Pascal Van Hille; Olivier Dameron; Louise Deléger; Cyril Grouin; Pierre Zweigenbaum; Julie Jacques; Emmanuel Chazard; Laure Laporte; Christine Henry; Anita Burgun

AIMS Remote monitoring of cardiac implantable electronic devices is a growing standard; yet, remote follow-up and management of alerts represents a time-consuming task for physicians or trained staff. This study evaluates an automatic mechanism based on artificial intelligence tools to filter atrial fibrillation (AF) alerts based on their medical significance. METHODS AND RESULTS We evaluated this method on alerts for AF episodes that occurred in 60 pacemaker recipients. AKENATON prototype workflow includes two steps: natural language-processing algorithms abstract the patient health record to a digital version, then a knowledge-based algorithm based on an applied formal ontology allows to calculate the CHA2DS2-VASc score and evaluate the anticoagulation status of the patient. Each alert is then automatically classified by importance from low to critical, by mimicking medical reasoning. Final classification was compared with human expert analysis by two physicians. A total of 1783 alerts about AF episode >5 min in 60 patients were processed. A 1749 of 1783 alerts (98%) were adequately classified and there were no underestimation of alert importance in the remaining 34 misclassified alerts. CONCLUSION This work demonstrates the ability of a pilot system to classify alerts and improves personalized remote monitoring of patients. In particular, our method allows integration of patient medical history with device alert notifications, which is useful both from medical and resource-management perspectives. The system was able to automatically classify the importance of 1783 AF alerts in 60 patients, which resulted in an 84% reduction in notification workload, while preserving patient safety.


Studies in health technology and informatics | 2016

Remote Monitoring of Cardiac Implantable Devices: Ontology Driven Classification of the Alerts.

Arnaud Rosier; Philippe Mabo; Lynda Temal; Pascal Van Hille; Olivier Dameron; Louise Deléger; Cyril Grouin; Pierre Zweigenbaum; Julie Jacques; Emmanuel Chazard; Laure Laporte; Christine Henry; Anita Burgun

The number of patients that benefit from remote monitoring of cardiac implantable electronic devices, such as pacemakers and defibrillators, is growing rapidly. Consequently, the huge number of alerts that are generated and transmitted to the physicians represents a challenge to handle. We have developed a system based on a formal ontology that integrates the alert information and the patient data extracted from the electronic health record in order to better classify the importance of alerts. A pilot study was conducted on atrial fibrillation alerts. We show some examples of alert processing. The results suggest that this approach has the potential to significantly reduce the alert burden in telecardiology. The methods may be extended to other types of connected devices.


Studies in health technology and informatics | 2006

Federating distributed and heterogeneous information sources in neuroimaging: the NeuroBase Project.

Christian Barillot; Habib Benali; Michel Dojat; Alban Gaignard; Bernard Gibaud; Serge Kinkingnéhun; Jean-Pierre Matsumoto; Mélanie Pélégrini-Issac; Eric Simon; Lynda Temal


formal ontologies meet industry | 2006

OntoNeuroBase: a Multi-Layered Application Ontology in Neuroimaging

Lynda Temal; Pascal Lando; Bernard Gibaud; Michel Dojat; Gilles Kassel; Anne Lapujade; Jules Verne


Proceedings of the American Medical Informatics Association Conference AMIA | 2011

Comparison of OWL and SWRL-based ontology modeling strategies for the determination of pacemaker alerts severity

Olivier Dameron; Pascal Van Hille; Lynda Temal; Arnaud Rosier; Louise Deléger; Cyril Grouin; Pierre Zweigenbaum; Anita Burgun


Nature Precedings | 2009

Modeling cardiac rhythm and heart rate using BFO and DOLCE

Lynda Temal; Arnaud Rosier; Olivier Dameron; Anita Burgun


Irbm | 2011

Aide à la décision en télécardiologie par une approche basée ontologie et centrée patient

Anita Burgun; A. Rosier; Lynda Temal; Julie Jacques; R. Messai; L. Duchemin; Louise Deléger; Cyril Grouin; P. Van Hille; Pierre Zweigenbaum; Régis Beuscart; David Delerue; Olivier Dameron; Philippe Mabo; Christine Henry


computer assisted radiology and surgery | 2006

Sharing data and image processing tools in neuroimaging.

Bernard Gibaud; Christian Barillot; Habib Benali; Michel Dojat; Alban Gaignard; Serge Kinkingnéhun; Jean-Pierre Matsumoto; Mélanie Pélégrini-Issac; Eric Simon; Lynda Temal

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Anita Burgun

Paris Descartes University

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Cyril Grouin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Louise Deléger

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pierre Zweigenbaum

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alban Gaignard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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