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Fuzzy aggregation of similarity values for electronic health record interoperability

2019 , Martinez-Villaseñor, Lourdes , Ponce, Hiram , González-Mendoza, Miguel

Schema matching is used for data integration, mediation, and conversion between heterogeneous sources. Nevertheless, mappings identified with an automatic or semi-automatic process can never be completely certain. In a process of concept alignment, it is necessary to manage uncertainty. In this paper, we present a fuzzy-based process of concept alignment for uncertainty management in schema matching problem. The ultimate goal is to enable interoperability between different electronic health records. Data integration of health information is done through the mediation of our ubiquitous user model framework. Results look promising and fuzzy theory proved to be a good fit for modeling uncertain schema matching. Fuzzy combined similarities can handle uncertainty in the schema matching process to enable interoperability between electronic health records improving the quality of mappings and diminishing the human error to verify the mappings. © 2019 - IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved

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Consumer Acceptance of an SMS-Assisted Smoking Cessation Intervention: A Multicountry Study

2013 , Martinez-Villaseñor, Lourdes , González-Mendoza, Miguel

A major challenge for creating personalized diet and activity applications is to capture static, semi-static and dynamic information about a person in a user-friendly way. Sharing and reusing information between heterogeneous sources like social networking applications, personal health records, specialized applications for diet and exercise monitoring, and personal devices with attached sensors can achieve a better understanding of the user. But gathering distributed user information from heterogeneous sources and making sense of it to enable user model interoperability entails handling the semantic heterogeneity of the user models. In this paper we describe a flexible user modeling ontology to provide representation for a ubiquitous user model and a process of concept alignment for interoperability between heterogeneous sources to address the lack of interoperability between profile suppliers and consumers. We provide an example of how information of different profile suppliers can be used to enrich fitness applications and personalize web services.

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Interoperability in Electronic Health Records Through the Mediation of Ubiquitous User Model

2016 , Martinez-Villaseñor, Lourdes , Miralles-Pechuán, Luis , González-Mendoza, Miguel

Martínez Villaseñor, M. de L., Miralles Pechuan, L. J. y González Mendoza, M. (2016). Interoperability in electronic health records through the mediation of ubiquitous user model. En: En: García, C, Caballero Gil, P., Burmester, M. y Quesada Arencibia, A. (editores), Ubiquitous Computing and Ambient Intelligence : 10th International Conference, UCAmI 2016, San Bartolomé de Tirajana, Gran Canaria, Spain, November 29 - December 2, 2016 (vol. 1), (pp. 190-200). Cham : Springer International Publishing. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-48746-5_19

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Process of Concept Alignment for Interoperability between Heterogeneous Sources

2013 , Martinez-Villaseñor, Lourdes , González-Mendoza, Miguel

Some researchers in the community of user modeling envision the need to share and reuse information scattered over different user models of heterogeneous sources. In a multi-application environment each application and service must repeat the effort of building a user model to obtain just a narrow understanding of the user. Sharing and reusing information between models can prevent the user from repeated configurations, help deal with application and services’ “cold start” problem, and provide enrichment to user models to obtain a better understanding of the user. But gathering distributed user information from heterogeneous sources to achieve user models interoperability implies handling syntactic and semantic heterogeneity. In this paper, we present a process of concept alignment to automatically determine semantic mapping relations that enable the interoperability between heterogeneous profile suppliers and consumers, given the mediation of a central ubiquitous user model. We show that the process of concept alignment for interoperability based in a two-tier matching strategy can allow the interoperability between social networking applications, FOAF, Personal Health Records (PHR) and personal devices.

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An enhanced process of concept alignment for dealing with overweight and obesity

2013 , Martinez-Villaseñor, Lourdes , González-Mendoza, Miguel

A major challenge for creating personalized diet and activity applications is to capture static, semi-static and dynamic information about a person in a user-friendly way. Sharing and reusing information between heterogeneous sources like social networking applications, personal health records, specialized applications for diet and exercise monitoring, and personal devices with attached sensors can achieve a better understanding of the user. Gathering distributed user information from heterogeneous sources and making sense of it to enable user model interoperability entails handling the semantic heterogeneity of the user models. In this paper, we enhance the process of concept alignment to automatically determine semantic mapping relations to enable interoperability between heterogeneous health and fitting applications. We add an internal structure similarity measure to increase the quality of generated mappings of our previous work. We show that the addition of an internal structure analysis of source data in the process of concept alignment improves the efficiency and effectiveness of measuring results. Constrain and data type verification done in the internal structure analysis proved to be useful when dealing with common conflicts between concepts.

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Sharing and Reusing Context Information in Ubiquitous Computing Environments

2014 , Martinez-Villaseñor, Lourdes , González-Mendoza, Miguel

In highly dynamic environments it is not enough to model the user in order to provide proactive and personalized services. User features, preferences and needs change depending on different contextual aspects such as physical, social and computational conditions. Taking context into account in these environments implies coping with high openness and dynamicity of users and devices. Moreover, context modeling and context management is a complex task performed repeatedly in distributed environments, and users constantly share information about current activities, location, social events, goals, etc. In different applications. There is huge context information scattered over user's applications and devices that can be taken advantage of to provide more accurate adaptation and personalization. In this paper, we analyze the literature solutions with a focus on context information interoperability. We aim to identify basic requirements to perform the complex task of sharing and reusing context information between heterogeneous context providers and context consumers.

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Special issue on Mexican International Conference on Artificial Intelligence, MICAI 2014 and 2015

2017 , Ponce, Hiram , González-Mendoza, Miguel , Martinez-Villaseñor, Lourdes

This special issue of the journal Soft Computing offers extended versions of some of the best-awarded, high-reviewed and invited papers presented on the 13th Mexican International Conference on Artificial Intelligence, MICAI 2014, held in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas, Mexico, on November 16–22, 2014, under the organization of the Mexican Society for Artificial Intelligence (SMIA) in cooperation with the Instituto Tecnológico de Tuxtla Gutiérrez and Universidad Autónoma de Chiapas, and on the 14th Mexican International Conference on Artificial Intelligence, MICAI 2015, held in Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico, on October 25–31, 2015, under the organization of the SMIA in cooperation with the Instituto de Investigaciones Eléctricas. ©2017 Soft Computing, Springer Verlag.

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Enrichment of Learner Profile with Ubiquitous User Model Interoperability

2014 , Martinez-Villaseñor, Lourdes , González-Mendoza, Miguel , Danvila Del Valle, Ignacio

Nowadays, there is a constant need of acquiring new knowledge and skills to keep up with the demands of changing environment. The design and development of training and educational systems that enable effective personalized learning help obtaining changing skills and fill competence gaps. The computational effort to create a user model that represents user’s knowledge, characteristics, interests, goals, background and preferences is repeatedly done by many systems and applications in several domains. Each system ends up with a partial view of the user. Researchers in user modeling foresee the need of sharing and reusing user model information in order to obtain a better understanding of the user and be able to provide personalized and proactive services. In this paper we present an application scenario of sharing and reusing information scattered in most commonly used applications to enhance learner profiles. ©Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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Special Issue on Interdisciplinary Artificial Intelligence: Methods and Applications of Nature-Inspired Computing

2022 , Ponce, Hiram , Martinez-Villaseñor, Lourdes , González-Mendoza, Miguel , Fonseca, Pablo A.

Inspiration in nature has been widely explored, from the macro to micro-scale. From a scientific perspective, these methods inspired by nature have proven to be efficient tools for tackling real-world problems because most of the latter are highly complex or the resources are limited to analyze them. This inspiration is justified by the fact that natural phenomena mainly emphasize adaptability, optimization, robustness, and organization, among other properties, to deal with complexity. In that sense, three methodologies are commonly considered: human-designed problem-solving techniques inspired by nature, the synthesis of natural phenomena to develop algorithms, and the use of nature-inspired materials to perform computations. Some applications of nature-inspired computing include data mining, machine learning, optimization, robotics, engineering control systems, human–machine interaction, healthcare, the Internet of Things, cloud computing, smart cities, and many others.|| This Special Issue aimed to cover original research works with emphasis on the methodologies and applications of nature-inspired computing to handle the above-mentioned complex systems. We received a total of 38 submitted papers, and 18 papers were accepted (covering 47% of acceptance rate).|| The Special Issue presents different works related to metaheuristic optimization methods and their applications of human brain inspiration and neural networks, natural language processing-based applications, and fuzzy-logic-based applications. ©2022 Applied Sciences, MDPI.

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Towards an ontology for ubiquitous user modeling interoperability

2012 , Martinez-Villaseñor, Lourdes , González-Mendoza, Miguel

In order to obtain a broader understanding of the user, some researchers in the community of user modeling envision the need to share information of user models between applications. But gathering distributed user information from heterogeneous sources to obtain user models interoperability implies handling syntactic and semantic heterogeneity. It is also important to provide means for a ubiquitous user model to evolve over time. We present U2MIO a dynamic ontology with flexible structure for user modeling interoperability based in SKOS ontology. The U2MIO provides mediation based user modeling for sharing and reusing information from heterogeneous user models. A two-tier matching strategy is proposed for the process of concept alignment that permits the interoperability between profile suppliers and consumers.