=Paper= {{Paper |id=None |storemode=property |title=None |pdfUrl=https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-941/aih2012_Preface.pdf |volume=Vol-941 }} ==None== https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-941/aih2012_Preface.pdf
                                                                                              AIH 2012




    Second Australian Workshop on Artificial Intelligence in
                      Health (AIH 2012)
                                           PREFACE
                     Sankalp Khanna1, 2, Abdul Sattar2, David Hansen1
              1
                  The Australian e-Health Research Centre, RBWH, Herston, Australia
             {Sankalp.Khanna, David.Hansen}@csiro.au
       2
           Institute for Integrated and Intelligent Systems, Griffith University, Australia
                             A.Sattar@griffith.edu.au

1     Motivation behind the workshop series

The business of health service delivery is a complex one. Employing over
850,000 people, and delivering services to 21.3 million residents, the Austra-
lian healthcare system is currently struggling to deal with increasing demand
for services, and an acute shortage of skilled professionals. The National e-
Health Strategy drives a nationwide agenda to provide the infrastructure and
tools required to support the planning, management and delivery of health
care services. National initiatives such as the National Health Reform Pro-
gram, the National Broadband Network, and the Personally Controlled Elec-
tronic Health Record are accelerating the use of information and communi-
cation technologies in delivering healthcare services. The Australasian Joint
Conferences on Artificial Intelligence (AI) provide an excellent opportunity to
bring together artificial intelligence researchers who are working in health
research.
    Driven by a senior program committee comprising distinguished faculty
from several Australian universities including Griffith University, the Univer-
sity of New South Wales, University of Newcastle, University of Western
Sydney, and Macquarie University, and specialist health research organisa-
tions including the CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre, the Artificial
Intelligence in Health workshop series was created in 2011 to bring these
researchers together as part of Australia’s premier Artificial Intelligence con-
ference.




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AIH 2012




           2     AIH 2011 – the First Australian Workshop on Artificial
                 Intelligence

           Held for the first time in December 2011, the workshop was the first of its
           kind to bring together scholars and practitioners nationally in the field of
           Artificial Intelligence driven Health Informatics to present and discuss their
           research, share their knowledge and experiences, define key research chal-
           lenges and explore possible collaborations to advance e-Health development
           nationally and internationally. The workshop was co-located with the 24th
           Australasian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence and was attended by
           25 delegates.
              Of the 16 submissions received, 6 were accepted as Full Papers and 5 as
           Short Papers accompanied with posters. All papers presented at the AIH
           2011 workshop were also invited to revise and submit their manuscripts for
           inclusion in a special issue of the Australasian Medical Journal. Of these,
           seven papers and a letter to the editor were published in the special issue in
           September 2012.

           3     AIH2012 - The Second Australian Workshop on Artificial
                 Intelligence

           The Second Australian Workshop on Artificial Intelligence (AIH 2012) is being
           held in conjunction with the 25th Australasian Joint Conference on Artificial
           Intelligence (AI 2012) in Sydney, Australia, on the 4th of December, 2012.
           The Call for Papers received an excellent response this year. All submitted
           papers went through a rigorous review process. Of these, 6 full papers and 3
           short papers have been accepted for presentation in the workshop and for
           publication in these CEUR proceedings. The workshop will also feature three
           keynote addresses and a panel discussion on the topic “AI in Health: the 3
           Big Challenges”.
               This year again, the workshop is offering 4 travel scholarships of $250
           each to students who were first authors of accepted papers. A best paper
           prize of $250 will also be awarded on the workshop day. Both prizes have
           been sponsored by the CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre.
           All accepted full papers and short papers will be also invited to extend and
           reformat their papers for publication in a special issue of the Australasian
           Medical Journal (www.amj.net.au). The journal is indexed on the following
           databases: DOAJ, EBSCO, Genamics journalseek, ProQuest, Index Copernicus,




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Open J-Gate, Intute, Global health and CAB Abstracts databases, MedWorm,
Scopus, Socolar, PMC, PubMed.

4     Workshop Organisation

4.1   Program Chairs

Abdul Sattar (Griffith University, Australia)
David Hansen (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre, Australia)

4.2   Workshop Chair

Sankalp Khanna (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre, Australia)

4.3   Senior Program Committee

Aditya Ghose (University of Newcastle, Australia)
Anthony Maeder (University of Western Sydney, Australia)
Wayne Wobcke (University of New South Wales, Australia)
Mehmet Orgun (Macquarie University, Australia)
Yogesan (Yogi) Kanagasingam (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre,
Australia)

4.4   Program Committee

Simon McBride (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre)
Adam Dunn (University of New South Wales)
Stephen Anthony (University of New South Wales)
Lawrence Cavedon (Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology / NICTA)
Diego Mollá Aliod (Macquarie University)
Michael Lawley (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre)
Anthony Nguyen (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre)
Amol Wagholikar (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre)
Bevan Koopman (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre)
Kewen Wang (Griffith University)
Vladimir Estivill-Castro (Griffith University)
John Thornton (Griffith University)
Bela Stantic (Griffith University)




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AIH 2012




           Byeong-Ho Kang (University of Tasmania)
           Justin Boyle (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre)
           Guido Zuccon (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre)
           Hugo Leroux(CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre)
           Alejandro Metke (CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre)

           4.5   Key Sponsors

           CSIRO Australian e-Health Research Centre
           Institute for Integrated and Intelligent Systems, Griffith University

           4.6   Supporting Organisations

           The Australasian College of Health Informatics
           The Australasian Medical Journal
           The Australasian Telehealth Society



           5     Acknowledgements

           We are especially thankful to the organising committee of the 25 th Austral-
           asian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AI 2012). This workshop se-
           ries would not have possible without their support. We would also like to
           thank the Workshop Chair of AI 2012, Hans Guesgen, for organising the
           workshops and championing these CEUR workshop proceedings.




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