Jeremy C Wyatt
Relevante Arbeiten
Meistzitierte Publikationen im Bereich Gesundheit & MedTech
Artificial intelligence and clinical decision support: clinicians’ perspectives on trust, trustworthiness, and liability
2023 · 80 Zit. · Medical Law Review
What do senior physicians think about AI and clinical decision support systems: Quantitative and qualitative analysis of data from specialty societies
2020 · 48 Zit. · Clinical Medicine
Proceedings of the 6th Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Medicine in Europe
1997 · 11 Zit. · Artificial Intelligence in Medicine in Europe
Using digital tools in the recruitment and retention in randomised controlled trials: Survey of UK Clinical Trial Units and a qualitative study
2019 · 5 Zit.
Which computable biomedical knowledge objects will be regulated? Results of a <scp>UK</scp> workshop discussing the regulation of knowledge libraries and software as a medical device
2023 · 3 Zit. · Learning Health Systems
VP55 Trial Recruitment & Retention Using Digital Tools: A Qualitative Study
2019 · 2 Zit. · International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care
Proceedings of the Joint European Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Medicine and Medical Decision Making
1999 · 2 Zit.
Analyzing Interventional Study Results
2022 · 1 Zit. · Health informatics
Sociotechnical Considerations for Accessibility and Equity in AI for Healthcare
2024 · 1 Zit.
Overview of Digital Health Research: A Global Multi-Disciplinary Collaborative Alliance from the Worldwide Universities Network (Preprint)
2019 · 0 Zit.
Proceedings of the 5th Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Medicine in Europe: Artificial Intelligence Medicine
1995 · 0 Zit.
Digital tools for more efficient conduct of RCTs: trials unit survey
2019 · 0 Zit. · ePrints Soton (University of Southampton)
Health Information and Information Technology
2022 · 0 Zit. · Cambridge University Press eBooks
Recollections of John Fox: One of the founders of medical <scp>AI</scp>
2022 · 0 Zit. · Learning Health Systems
User-focused research to identify the benefits of digital tools for the recruitment and retention in trials: a qualitative study
2019 · 0 Zit. · ePrints Soton (University of Southampton)