RTU logo

United States Academic Collaborators

On campus collaborators

Vision, Perceptual Machines, and Learning Lab

Vision, Perceptual Machines, and Learning Lab logo The Vision Lab's mission is to invent the mathematical, computational, and semantic tools that will allow imaging scientists and visual computing applications to fully tap the information-rich imagery and video currently available. We investigate problems in all ranges of computer vision and medical imaging, from low-level signal processing to high-level analysis. Our research is funded by the scientific, defense, intelligence, medical, and industrial sponsors and has applications in a variety of domains including surveillance, human-computer interaction, cancer imaging, biometrics, and more.
The lab leads the ISTARE project.


Center for Cognitive Science

Center for Cognitive Science logo The Center for Cognitive Science is the representation on the University at Buffalo campus of an academic and private-sector movement, named "cognitive science", of which the aim is to investigate the nature of intellective processes as exhibited either by the human mind or by computer. The Center brings together researchers from a number of traditionally separate disciplines -- primarily, computer science, psychology, linguistics, philosophy, anthropology , and neuroscience -- in order to build a new and unified understanding of cognition that is compounded from the different disciplinary perspectives and that moves beyond them.
The Center is involved in the UB Task Force for ontology-based IT support for large scale field studies in Psychiatry .


UB School of Dental Medicine

UB Dental School The primary mission of the School of Dental Medicine at the University at Buffalo is to educate oral health care professionals, biomedical scientists and educators; to discover medical and biological knowledge; and to deliver high quality, state-of-the-art oral health care. The School improves the oral and general health of the people of the State of New York through its teaching, research and service.
The School is involved in the Oral Diagnostic Consultation Tracking project.


Halfon Lab

Halfon Lab The Halfon laboratory investigates the genetic regulatory circuitry responsible for assigning cell fates during development, using the Drosophila embryonic mesoderm as our primary model system. Our work combines genomics and bioinformatics with the traditional molecular and genetic techniques of Drosophila research to investigate two key components of developmental regulatory networks, intercellular signaling and transcriptional regulation.
The RTU is exploring ways to integrate the ontology evolution mechanism described in Ceusters & Smith, 2006a in the REDfly database, developed in Halfon's lab.



Off campus collaborators


Division of Biomedical Informatics, Little Rock, Arkansas

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences logo
The Division of Biomedical Informatics at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences was established in 2009 to lead biomedical informatics initiative across campus, including the biomedical informatics component of the Arkansas Center for Clinical and Translational Research (a member of the CTSA consortium) and the Research Informatics Shared Resource of the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute. The inaugural Chief of the Division, Dr. William Hogan, collaborates with the RTS on the representation of diseases, diagnoses, and disorders.



Overseas Collaborators

IFOMIS: Institute for Formal Ontology and Medical Information Science, Germany.

IFOMIS IFOMIS comprehends an interdisciplinary research group, with members from Philosophy, Computer and Information Science, Logic, Medicine, and Medical Informatics, focusing on theoretically grounded research in both formal and applied ontology. Its goal is to develop a formal ontology that will be applied and tested in the domain of medical and biomedical information science.
Former IFOMIS researcher Shahid MANZOOR who started developing a working prototype of a Referent Tracking System as described in [Ceusters & Smith, 2005b] is now member of the RTU.


RAMIT: Research in Advanced Medical Informatics and Telematics, Belgium.

RAMIT RAMIT is a non-profit independent research organistion established with the help of the State University of Ghent. The working-team in RAMIT is multidisciplinary: medical doctors, engineers, informaticians, statisticians and secretarial staff. Recent activities include successful national, European and international projects dealing with eg. electronic medical record systems, decision support systems, electronic health data interchange, security, natural language processing in healthcare and computer assisted instruction in medicine.
RAMIT collaborates with the RTU on an Ontology for Risks against Patient Safety.

 

Interested to collaborate ?

If you want to scientifically contribute to further develop or test the referent tracking paradigm, or if you consider referent tracking to be useful for your purposes, don't hesitate to contact us. We'll discuss with you the possibilities for collaboration.
Be inspired by the projects already running.
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