John Fox

Summary

Affiliation: University of Oxford
Country: UK

Publications

  1. ncbi From guidelines to careflows: modelling and supporting complex clinical processes
    John Fox
    Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
    Stud Health Technol Inform 139:44-62. 2008
  2. ncbi Artificial cognitive systems: Where does argumentation fit in?
    John Fox
    Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1, United Kingdom www cossac org
    Behav Brain Sci 34:78-9. 2011
  3. ncbi Clinical guidelines and care pathways: a case study applying PROforma decision support technology to the breast cancer care pathway
    Vivek Patkar
    Department of Academic Oncology, UCL, London, UK
    Stud Health Technol Inform 139:233-42. 2008
  4. ncbi Decision support for health care: the PROforma evidence base
    John Fox
    Head of Laboratory, Advanced Computation Laboratory, London Research Institute, Cancer Research UK, London, UK
    Inform Prim Care 14:49-54. 2006
  5. ncbi Automatic generation of spoken dialogue from medical plans and ontologies
    Martin Beveridge
    Advanced Computation Lab, Cancer Research UK, 44 Lincoln s Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PX, UK
    J Biomed Inform 39:482-99. 2006
  6. ncbi LISA: a web-based decision-support system for trial management of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
    Jonathan Bury
    Academic Unit of Pathology, Division of Genomic Medicine, University of Sheffield Medical School, Sheffield, UK
    Br J Haematol 129:746-54. 2005
  7. ncbi Modelling clinical goals: a corpus of examples and a tentative ontology
    John Fox
    Advanced Computation Laboratory, Cancer Research, UK
    Stud Health Technol Inform 101:31-45. 2004
  8. ncbi A quantitative and qualitative evaluation of LISA, a decision support system for chemotherapy dosing in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
    Jonathan Bury
    Division of Genomic Medicine, University of Sheffield Medical School, Beech Hill Road, Sheffield S10 2RX, UK
    Stud Health Technol Inform 107:197-201. 2004
  9. ncbi The syntax and semantics of the PROforma guideline modeling language
    David R Sutton
    Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, England
    J Am Med Inform Assoc 10:433-43. 2003
  10. ncbi Comparing computer-interpretable guideline models: a case-study approach
    Mor Peleg
    Stanford Medical Informatics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305 5479, USA
    J Am Med Inform Assoc 10:52-68. 2003

Detail Information

Publications10

  1. ncbi From guidelines to careflows: modelling and supporting complex clinical processes
    John Fox
    Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
    Stud Health Technol Inform 139:44-62. 2008
    ..We conclude that these offer complementary views of clinical processes and that a key research challenge is find a way of unifying them...
  2. ncbi Artificial cognitive systems: Where does argumentation fit in?
    John Fox
    Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1, United Kingdom www cossac org
    Behav Brain Sci 34:78-9. 2011
    ..A formal framework for argumentation that has emerged from research on artificial cognitive systems that parallels M&S's proposals may shed light on mental processes that underpin social interactions...
  3. ncbi Clinical guidelines and care pathways: a case study applying PROforma decision support technology to the breast cancer care pathway
    Vivek Patkar
    Department of Academic Oncology, UCL, London, UK
    Stud Health Technol Inform 139:233-42. 2008
    ..Some important lessons learned during the process are shared and future directions are discussed...
  4. ncbi Decision support for health care: the PROforma evidence base
    John Fox
    Head of Laboratory, Advanced Computation Laboratory, London Research Institute, Cancer Research UK, London, UK
    Inform Prim Care 14:49-54. 2006
    ....
  5. ncbi Automatic generation of spoken dialogue from medical plans and ontologies
    Martin Beveridge
    Advanced Computation Lab, Cancer Research UK, 44 Lincoln s Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PX, UK
    J Biomed Inform 39:482-99. 2006
    ..The competence of the resulting dialogue application, its speech recognition performance, and dialogue performance are all evaluated to determine the applicability of this approach...
  6. ncbi LISA: a web-based decision-support system for trial management of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
    Jonathan Bury
    Academic Unit of Pathology, Division of Genomic Medicine, University of Sheffield Medical School, Sheffield, UK
    Br J Haematol 129:746-54. 2005
    ....
  7. ncbi Modelling clinical goals: a corpus of examples and a tentative ontology
    John Fox
    Advanced Computation Laboratory, Cancer Research, UK
    Stud Health Technol Inform 101:31-45. 2004
    ..As part of this, we report on a study we have undertaken which has identified over 200 goals in the routine management of breast cancer, and outline a tentative formal structure for this corpus...
  8. ncbi A quantitative and qualitative evaluation of LISA, a decision support system for chemotherapy dosing in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
    Jonathan Bury
    Division of Genomic Medicine, University of Sheffield Medical School, Beech Hill Road, Sheffield S10 2RX, UK
    Stud Health Technol Inform 107:197-201. 2004
    ....
  9. ncbi The syntax and semantics of the PROforma guideline modeling language
    David R Sutton
    Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, England
    J Am Med Inform Assoc 10:433-43. 2003
    ..Disclosure: PROforma has been used as the basis of a commercial decision support and guideline technology Arezzo (Infermed, London, UK; details in text)...
  10. ncbi Comparing computer-interpretable guideline models: a case-study approach
    Mor Peleg
    Stanford Medical Informatics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305 5479, USA
    J Am Med Inform Assoc 10:52-68. 2003
    ..We have studied similarities and differences between CIGs in order to identify issues that must be resolved before a consensus on a set of common components can be developed...