AIOct 2, 2018

Rough set based lattice structure for knowledge representation in medical expert systems: low back pain management case study

arXiv:1810.01560v132 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses knowledge representation issues in medical expert systems, specifically for low back pain management, but appears incremental as it builds on existing rough set methods.

The paper tackles the problem of redundancy and inconsistency in medical expert system knowledge bases by proposing a rough set based lattice structure for knowledge representation, which improves computational efficiency in time and space and generates an optimal set of decision rules with reliability measures.

The aim of medical knowledge representation is to capture the detailed domain knowledge in a clinically efficient manner and to offer a reliable resolution with the acquired knowledge. The knowledge base to be used by a medical expert system should allow incremental growth with inclusion of updated knowledge over the time. As knowledge are gathered from a variety of knowledge sources by different knowledge engineers, the problem of redundancy is an important concern here due to increased processing time of knowledge and occupancy of large computational storage to accommodate all the gathered knowledge. Also there may exist many inconsistent knowledge in the knowledge base. In this paper, we have proposed a rough set based lattice structure for knowledge representation in medical expert systems which overcomes the problem of redundancy and inconsistency in knowledge and offers computational efficiency with respect to both time and space. We have also generated an optimal set of decision rules that would be used directly by the inference engine. The reliability of each rule has been measured using a new metric called credibility factor, and the certainty and coverage factors of a decision rule have been re-defined. With a set of decisions rules arranged in descending order according to their reliability measures, the medical expert system will consider the highly reliable and certain rules at first, then it would search for the possible and uncertain rules at later stage, if recommended by physicians. The proposed knowledge representation technique has been illustrated using an example from the domain of low back pain. The proposed scheme ensures completeness, consistency, integrity, non-redundancy, and ease of access.

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