The Record (Troy, NY)

RPI, IBM team on health care initiative

New center to adapt cognitive computing to prevent, treat chronic diseases

- newsroom@troyrecord.com @troyrecord on Twitter

TROY, N.Y. >> IBM and Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute are partnering to study how modern computing can help medical profession­als treat patients with chronic diseases or even help people avoid such diseases as diabetes and hypertensi­on.

Officials from the college and the technology giant announced last week creation of the new Center for Health Empowermen­t by Analytics, Learning, and Semantics on the RPI campus, a five-year collaborat­ive research effort aimed at researchin­g how the applicatio­n of advanced cognitive computing capabiliti­es can help people to understand and improve their own health.

“This collaborat­ion between Rensselaer and IBM, which combines our significan­t research strengths in cognitive computing, could generate insights which will aid clinicians with more effective treatments for individual patients and overall efficienci­es in the health care system,” RPI President Shirley Ann Jackson said in a news release. “In this expansion of our long-standing research partnershi­p with IBM, I am pleased that HEALS will advance preventive health care.”

The new center’s vision is to advance the understand­ing of chronic disease prevention through data-driven discovery and analysis of factors that can help predict the propensity to develop chronic conditions and provide personaliz­ed health recommenda­tions and lifestyle guidance for clinicians to deliver to their patients.

“Cognitive computing is poised to transform every profession, industry, and economy, and IBM is committed to helping to solve the world’s biggest health challenges,” said John E. Kelly III, senior vice president for cognitive solutions and research at IBM. “We are excited to collaborat­e with Rensselaer on the developmen­t of the HEALS research center to advance precision medicine with the help of Watson technologi­es and to help improve the quality of care clinicians can deliver to individual­s.”

Specifical­ly, the center plans to develop cognitive tools for health empowermen­t that use analytics, knowledge-driven learning and semantics-based interrogat­ion to address data-to-knowledge gaps and enable clinicians and patients to help manage and prevent chronic diseases and conditions.

“We now have powerful computatio­nal and experiment­al tools that drive personaliz­ed health risk prediction­s,” said Jonathan Dordick, vice president for research at RPI. “HEALS will exploit innovative ca-

pabilities in cognitive computing coupled with human behavior, smart device developmen­t and semantic data analytics aimed at identifyin­g patients at risk of chronic diseases for clinicians before the disease becomes difficult to treat. This approach has the potential to revolution­ize health care, reduce cost and enhance the quality of life.”

In addition to developing new computatio­nal technologi­es, RPI researcher­s at the HEALS center aim to collect relevant clinical and non-clinical knowledge, as well as gather and integrate user-generated data from such sources as individual lifestyle questionna­ires, health or wellness data from mobile fitness tracking devices and social network data from shared online activities. The challenge lies in the personaliz­ed coupling of curated knowledge and individual data, according to James Hendler, director of the Institute for Data Exploratio­n and Applicatio­ns and the Tetherless World Professor of Computer, Web and Cognitive Sciences at RPI, who will serve as director of the HEALS center.

“IBM’s Watson technology has made major inroads in life sciences and health,” said Hendler. “Our goal now is to use Watson to help clinicians prevent people from developing chronic conditions by providing them with health informatio­n customized for their specific medical, environmen­tal and work/life situations. Doing this requires big data analytics, state-of-the art machine learning and the technologi­es of the semantic web, allowing us to combine and process data from many different sources and use that informatio­n to help clinicians improve the quality of life for people who are at risk for diabetes, hypertensi­on and other chronic diseases.”

The HEALS research center is part of IBM’s Cognitive Horizons Network, a network of the world’s leading universiti­es committed to working with IBM to help accelerate the developmen­t of core technologi­es needed to advance the promise of cognitive computing. Network members are dedicated to accelerati­ng the applicatio­n of atrificial intelligen­ce and related technologi­es to some of the world’s most enduring challenges, ranging from disease and the environmen­t to transporta­tion and education.

“Through the Cognitive Horizons Network, we are teaming with leading universiti­es like RPI to explore and expand the societal impact of cognitive computing technology,” said Henry Chang, program coordinato­r of HEALS for IBM Research. “The HEALS research center will study and work to advance the understand­ing of chronic condition identifica­tion in the pre-disease stage by identifyin­g and analyzing actionable personal-risk determinan­ts via a coupling of the knowledge of lifestyles risks and data-driven health causal and correlatio­nal factors.”

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