Data driven science has become a major decision-making aid for the diagnosis and treatment of disease. Computational and visual analytics enables effective exploration and sense making of large and complex data through the deployment of appropriate data science methods, meaningful visualization and human-information interaction.
This edited volume covers state-of-the-art theory, method, models, design, evaluation and application in computational and visual analytics in desktop, mobile and immersive environments for analysing biomedical and health data. The book is focused on data-driven integral analysis, including computational methods and visual analytics practices and solutions for discovering actionable knowledge in support of clinical actions in real environments.
By studying how data and visual analytics has been implemented into the healthcare domain, the book demonstrates how analytics influences the domain through improving decision making, specifying diagnostics, selecting the best treatments and generating clinical certainty.
About the Author: Associate Professor Quang Vinh Nguyen is Director of Academic Programs for Postgraduate ICT at the School of Computer, Data and Mathematical Sciences and the MARCS Institute for Brain, Behaviour and Development at Western Sydney University.
Professor Paul J. Kennedy is Director of the Biomedical Data Science Laboratory at the Australia Artificial Intelligence Institute and Head of Computer Science in the Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology at the University of Technology Sydney.
Professor Simeon J. Simoff is Cluster Pro Vice Chancellor (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) and Dean of the School of Computer, Data & Mathematical Sciences at Western Sydney University.
Professor Daniel R. Catchpoole is Group Leader of the Tumour Bank, Children's Cancer Research Unit at the Children's Hospital at Westmead, Australia. He is also affiliated with the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Sydney and of Information Technology at the University of Technology Sydney.