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- Grant H Kruger and Kevin K Tremper.
- Department of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-5048, USA. ghkruger@med.umich.edu
- Anesthesiol Clin. 2011 Sep 1;29(3):487-504.
AbstractIntelligent medical displays have the potential to improve patient outcomes by integrating multiple physiologic signals, exhibiting high sensitivity and specificity, and reducing information overload for physicians. Research findings have suggested that information overload and distractions caused by patient care activities and alarms generated by multiple monitors in acute care situations, such as the operating room and the intensive care unit, may produce situations that negatively impact the outcomes of patients under anesthesia. This can be attributed to shortcomings of human-in-the-loop monitoring and the poor specificity of existing physiologic alarms. Modern artificial intelligence techniques (ie, intelligent software agents) are demonstrating the potential to meet the challenges of next-generation patient monitoring and alerting.Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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