2009
Miranda, M.; Duarte, J.; Abelha, A.; Machado, J.; Neves, J.
Interoperability and healthcare Proceedings Article
Em: pp. 205-212, EUROSIS, Leicester, 2009, (cited By 8; Conference of 23rd European Simulation and Modelling Conference, ESM 2009 ; Conference Date: 26 October 2009 Through 28 October 2009; Conference Code:104370).
Resumo | Links | BibTeX | Etiquetas: Dna origamis; Quality-of-information; Research groups; Self-organised, Health care; Information systems; Integration; Medical computing; Modal analysis; Multi agent systems; Scaffolds, Interoperability
@inproceedings{Miranda2009205,
title = {Interoperability and healthcare},
author = {M. Miranda and J. Duarte and A. Abelha and J. Machado and J. Neves},
url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84898619959&partnerID=40&md5=f7989a0ae6b9affd1048f8f792cbbb61},
year = {2009},
date = {2009-01-01},
journal = {ESM 2009 - 2009 European Simulation and Modelling Conference: Modelling and Simulation 2009},
pages = {205-212},
publisher = {EUROSIS},
address = {Leicester},
abstract = {In our research group work is being conducted on how to develop self organised Engineered Information Systems (EIS), which could enable researchers to create programs with significantly improved functionalities, leading to a more efficient and faster computation. These EIS are based on an original DNA origami which may be designed to serve as a scaffold for electronic workers (or software agents), going beyond existing technology either in terms of Socialization, Interoperability or the process of quantification of the Quality-of-Information (Qol) being exploited.},
note = {cited By 8; Conference of 23rd European Simulation and Modelling Conference, ESM 2009 ; Conference Date: 26 October 2009 Through 28 October 2009; Conference Code:104370},
keywords = {Dna origamis; Quality-of-information; Research groups; Self-organised, Health care; Information systems; Integration; Medical computing; Modal analysis; Multi agent systems; Scaffolds, Interoperability},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
In our research group work is being conducted on how to develop self organised Engineered Information Systems (EIS), which could enable researchers to create programs with significantly improved functionalities, leading to a more efficient and faster computation. These EIS are based on an original DNA origami which may be designed to serve as a scaffold for electronic workers (or software agents), going beyond existing technology either in terms of Socialization, Interoperability or the process of quantification of the Quality-of-Information (Qol) being exploited.