Call for Papers
5th International Workshop on Knowledge Representation for Health Care 
(KRH4C'13)

+

6th International Workshop on Process-oriented Information Systems in 
Healthcare (ProHealth’13)

 

Organized as One Full Day Workshop

Acronym: KR4HC’13 / ProHealth’13

Murcia, Spain –  June 1st, 2013
In conjunction with the 14th Conference on 
Artificial Intelligence in Medicine (AIME'13)
 
Web site: http://banzai-deim.urv.net/events/KR4HC-ProHealth-2013/


Important Dates
Deadline for workshop paper submissions: 8 March 2013

Notification of Acceptance: 9 April 2013

Camera-ready version: 7 May 2013

KR4HC/ProHealth Workshop: 1 June 2013



Workshop Goals

Healthcare organizations are facing the challenge of delivering high quality 
services to their patients at affordable costs. These challenges become more 
prominent with the growth in the aging population with chronic diseases and the 
rise of healthcare costs. High degree of specialization of medical disciplines, 
huge amounts of medical knowledge and patient data to be consulted in order to 
provide evidence-based recommendations, and the need for personalized 
healthcare are prevalent trends in this information-intensive domain. The 
emerging situation necessitates computer-based support of healthcare process & 
knowledge management as well as clinical decision-making.

This workshop brings together researchers from two communities who have been 
addressing these challenges from two different perspectives. The 
knowledge-representation for healthcare community, which is part of the larger 
medical informatics community, has been focusing on knowledge representation 
and reasoning to support knowledge management and clinical decision-making. 
This community has been developing efficient representations, technologies, and 
tools for integrating all the important elements that health care providers 
work with: Electronic Medical Records (EMRs) and healthcare information 
systems, clinical practice guidelines, and standardized medical vocabularies. 
The process-oriented information systems in healthcare community, which is part 
of the larger business process management (BPM) community, has been studying 
ways to adopt BPM technology in order to provide effective solutions for 
healthcare process management. BPM technology has been successfully used in 
other sectors for establishing process-aware enterprise information systems 
(vs. collections of stand-alone systems for different departments in the 
organization). Adopting BPM technology in the healthcare sector is starting to 
address some of the unique characteristics of healthcare processes, including 
their high degree of flexibility, the integration with EMRs and shared 
semantics of healthcare domain concepts, and the need for tight cooperation and 
communication among medical care teams.

This joint workshop brings together two approaches: healthcare process support, 
as addressed in previous ProHealth workshops, and healthcare knowledge 
representation as dealt with in previous KR4HC workshops. The workshop shall 
elaborate both the potential and the limitations of the two approaches for 
supporting healthcare process & healthcare knowledge management as well as 
clinical decision-making. It shall further provide a forum wherein challenges, 
paradigms, and tools for optimized knowledge-based clinical process support can 
be debated. We want to bring together researchers and practitioners from these 
different, yet similar fields to improve the understanding of domain specific 
requirements, methods and theories, tools and techniques, and the gaps between 
IT support and healthcare processes yet to be closed. This forum also provides 
an opportunity to explore how the approaches from the two communities could be 
better integrated.

History of the Joint Workshop 

Providing computer-based support in healthcare is a topic that has been picking 
up speed for more than two decades. We are witnessing a plethora of different 
workshops devoted to various topics involving computer applications for 
healthcare. Our goal has been to try to join forces with other communities in 
order to learn from each other, advance science, and create a stronger and 
larger community. In 2012, the two workshops, KR4HC and ProHealth held a joint 
workshop, which proved to be very successful. This year, we are aiming to 
continue the collaboration initiative and hold another joint workshop. 

The two workshops have quite a long history, as briefly described below.

The first KR4HC workshop, held in conjunction with the 12th Artificial 
Intelligence in Medicine conference (AIME'09), brought together members of two 
existing communities: the clinical guidelines and protocols community, who held 
a line of four workshops (European Workshop on Computerized Guidelines and 
Protocols (CPG'2000, CPG'2004); AI Techniques in Health Care: Evidence-based 
Guidelines and Protocols 2006; Computer-based Clinical Guidelines and Protocols 
2008) and a related community who held a series of three workshops / special 
tracks devoted to the formalization, organization, and deployment of procedural 
knowledge in healthcare (CBMS’07 Special Track on Machine Learning and 
Management of Health Care Procedural Knowledge 2007; From Medical Knowledge to 
Global Health Care 2007; Knowledge Management for Health Care Procedures 2008). 
Since then, two more KR4HC workshops have been held, in conjunction with the 
ECAI’10 and the AIME’11 conferences.

The first ProHealth workshop took place in the context of the 5th Int’l 
Conference on Business Process Management (BPM) in 2007. The next three 
ProHealth Workshops were also held in conjunction with BPM conferences (BPM'08, 
BPM’09, and BPM’11). The aim of ProHealth has been to bring together 
researchers from the BPM and the Medical Informatics communities. As the 
workshop was associated with the BPM conference that had never been attended by 
researchers from the Medical Informatics community, we had included Medical 
Informatics researchers as keynote speakers of the workshop, members of the 
program committee, and to our delight, saw a number of researchers from the 
Medical Informatics community actively participating in ProHealth workshops. 
Following the keynote talk given by Manfred Reichert from the BPM community at 
the Artificial Intelligence in Medicine 2011 (AIME’11) conference, where KR4HC 
was held, the organizers of ProHealth and KR4HC workshops have shown their 
interest to hold their workshops in conjunction as part of the BPM'12 
conference, which marks a landmark in the collaboration between the two 
communities. We are continuing the efforts that started four years ago by 
members of the Software Engineering in Health Care (SEHC) community to 
strengthen the collaboration between the ProHealth and SEHC communities. 

Workshop Theme

Original contributions are sought, regarding the development of theory, 
techniques, and use cases of Artificial Intelligence and / or process 
management in the area of healthcare, particularly connected to patient data, 
clinical guidelines and healthcare processes.

Submitted papers will be evaluated on the basis of significance, originality, 
technical quality, and exposition. Papers should clearly establish their 
research contribution and the relation to the goals of the workshop. The scope 
of the workshop includes, but is not limited to the following areas:

•    Process modeling in healthcare
•    Computer-interpretable clinical guidelines / protocols and decision support
•    Workflow management in healthcare
•    Semantic integration of healthcare processes with electronic medical 
records 
•    Knowledge representation and ontologies for healthcare processes
•    Temporal knowledge representations and exploitation
•    Facilitating knowledge-acquisition of healthcare processes
•    Visualization, monitoring and mining healthcare processes
•    Knowledge extraction from healthcare databases and EPRs
•    Knowledge combination, personalization and adaptation of healthcare 
processes
•    Compliance of healthcare processes
•    Evaluation of quality and safety of careflow systems
•    Managing flexibility and exceptions in healthcare processes
•    Process optimization and simulation in healthcare organizations and 
healthcare networks
•    Experiences in deploying knowledge-based tools in healthcare
•    Patient empowerment in healthcare 
•    Linking clinical care and clinical research
•    Lifecycle management for healthcare processes
•    Context-aware healthcare processes
•    Ambient intelligence & smart processes in healthcare
•    Mobile process support in healthcare
•    Process interoperability & standards in healthcare
•    Process-oriented system architectures in healthcare

Format of the Workshop

The 1-day workshop will comprise accepted long and short papers, tool 
presentations, and 1 keynote. Papers should be submitted in advance and will be 
reviewed by at least three members of the program committee. An informal 
proceedings will be available during the workshop. At least one author for each 
accepted paper should register for the workshop and present the paper. The 
selected best long (full) papers will be included in the formal proceedings, 
which are expected to be published as part of the LNAI Springer series, as it 
was done in all previous editions of the workshop.
Paper Submission
Prospective authors are invited to submit papers for presentation in any of the 
areas listed above. Only papers in English will be accepted. Three types of 
submissions are possible: (1) full papers (12 pages long) reporting mature 
research results, (2) position papers reporting research that may be in 
preliminary stage not yet been evaluated, and (3) tool reports. Position papers 
and tool reports should be no longer than 6 pages. Papers must present original 
research contributions not concurrently submitted elsewhere.
Papers should be submitted in the LNCS  format. The title page must contain a 
short abstract, a classification of the topics covered, preferably using the 
list of topics above, and an indication of the submission category (regular 
paper, position paper, or tool report). Papers (in PDF format) should be 
submitted electronically via the Easychair system 
https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=kr4hcprohealth2013.




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