Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

Visualization of health indicators: utilizing data mining techniques and statistical analysis for effective comparison of user profiles

  • Original Article
  • Published:
Network Modeling Analysis in Health Informatics and Bioinformatics Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

In this paper, we describe an integrated framework which incorporates data mining and statistical methods leading to the development of a visualization tool to facilitate users in understanding and exploring health indicator data. Due to the increasing cost of providing health care and decreasing participation in physical activities, motivating individuals to self-monitor themselves and according to improve health is an important case to consider. Here, it is essential to emphasize that the developed system will not replace professionals in health care who are expected to have hands on serious cases. Our target is to provide a framework flexible enough to allow for periodical or daily follow-up of personal indicators and hence may raise some concerns leading to early warning to go for serious check in the clinic. By using visualizations, we hope to aid a variety of potential end users in understanding and exploring different aspects of their health. In the back-end, the system employs some data mining and statistical methods for effective prediction to be used in articulating the current state of the interacting user. User interactivity is important because we are trying to allow users to use the system for a personal approach to improve health. Using data mining techniques, we will present the user with a variety of different views to compare their personal profiles with. By making active comparisons, we hope to provide a context for users to understand how his/her health levels compare to others within the same age range or location. We concentrate on Canada as a case study, though the proposed framework could be smoothly adapted to fit any other case for which the relevant data are available. The conducted user study demonstrated the applicability and effectiveness of the developed framework.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Fig. 1
Fig. 2
Fig. 3
Fig. 4
Fig. 5
Fig. 6
Fig. 7
Fig. 8
Fig. 9
Fig. 10
Fig. 11
Fig. 12

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  1. Ali-Hasan N, Gavales D, Peterson A, Raw M (2006) Fitster: social fitness information visualizer. In: Proceedings of CHI ’06 extended abstracts on human factors in computing systems, Montreal, QC, Canada

  2. Andry F, Naval G, Nicholson D, Lee M, Kosoy I, Puzankov L (2009) Data visualization in a personal health record using rich internet application graphic components. In: Proceedings of the international conference on health informatics, HEALTHINF 2009. Porto, Portugal, pp 111–116

  3. Andry F, Freeman L, Gillson J, Kienitz J, Lee M, Naval G, Nicholson D (2008) Highly interactive and user-friendly web application for people with diabetes. In: Proceedings of IEEE international conference on communication systems, HEALTHCOM 2008, pp 118–120

  4. Barnum CM (2002) Usability testing and research. The Allyn and Bacon series in technical communication. Longman Publishers, London. ISBN 0-205-31519-4

  5. Calero-Valdez A, Ziefle M, Alagoz F, Holzinger A (2010) Mental models of menu structures in diabetes assistants. In: Proceedings of the international conference on computers helping people with special needs, ICCHP 2010. Springer LNCS, London, pp 584–591

  6. Calero-Valdez A, Ziefle M, Horstmann A, Herding D, Schroeder U (2009) Effects of aging and domain knowledge on usability in small screen devices for diabetes patients. In: Holzinger A, Miesenberger K (eds) Proceedings of the symposium of the workgroup human-computer interaction and usability engineering of the Austrian Computer Society on HCI and usability for e-Inclusion, USAB 2009. Springer LNCS, London, pp 366–386

    Google Scholar 

  7. Canadian Community Health Survey. http://www.statcan.gc.ca/cgi-bin/imdb/p2SV.pl?Function=getSurvey&SDDS=3226&lang=en&db=IMDB&dbg=f&adm=8&dis=2#top. Accessed 26 March 2010

  8. Constantinescu L, Pradana R, Kim J, Gong P, Fulham M, Feng D (2009) Rich internet application system for patient-centric healthcare data management using handheld devices EMBC. In: Proceedings of IEEE engineering in medicine and biology society, pp 5167–5170.

  9. DataSets. http://www.statcan.gc.ca/rdc-cdr/data-donnee-eng.htm. Accessed 27 April 2014

  10. Donker-Kuijer MW, de Jong M, Lentz L (2010) Usable guidelines for usable websites? An analysis of five e-government heuristics. Gov Inf Q 27(3):254–263

    Article  Google Scholar 

  11. GapMinder. http://www.gapminder.org/. Accessed 27 April 2014

  12. Health Regions. http://www.cihi.ca/indicators/en/regions.shtml. Accessed 27 April 2014

  13. Ivory MY, Hearst MA (2001) The state of the art in automating usability evaluation of user interfaces. ACM Comput Surv (CSUR) 33(4):470–516

    Article  Google Scholar 

  14. Katz DL, Nordwall B (2008) Novel interactive cell-phone technology for health enhancement. J Diabetes Sci Technol 2(1):147–153

    Article  Google Scholar 

  15. Kolman S, Dufilie AS, Anbalagan SK, Grinstein G (2012) InfoMaps: a session based document visualization and analysis tool. In: Proceedings of the international conference on information visualisation, pp 274–282

  16. Koskinen E, Sahninen J (2007) A customizable mobile tool for supporting health behavior interventions. In: Proceedings of the annual international conference of the IEEE engineering in medicine and biology society, Los Alamitos, CA, vol 1–16, pp 5908–5911

  17. Lewis JR (1995) IBM computer usability satisfaction questionnaires: psychometric evaluation and instructions for use. Int J Human–Comput Interact 7(1):57–78

    Article  Google Scholar 

  18. Maimon O, Rokach L (2005) Data mining and knowledge discovery handbook. Springer, Berlin

    Book  MATH  Google Scholar 

  19. Mattila E, Parkka J, Hermersdorf M, Kaasinen J, Vainio J, Samposalo K, Merilahti J, Kolari J, Kulju M, Lappalainen R, Korhonen K (2008) Mobile diary for wellness management: results on usage and usability in two user studies. IEEE Trans Inf Technol Biomed 12(4):501–512

    Article  Google Scholar 

  20. Mattila E, Korhonen I, Salminen JH, Ahtinen A, Koskinen E, Sarela A, Parkka J, Lappalainen R (2010) Empowering citizens for well-being and chronic disease management with wellness diary. IEEE Trans Inf Technol Biomed 14(2):456–463

    Article  Google Scholar 

  21. Ozyer T, Alhajj R (2006) Clustering by integrating multi-objective optimization with weighted k-means and validity analysis. In: Proceedings of the international conference on intelligent data engineering and automated learning. Springer, Berlin

  22. Parmanto B, Paramita MV, Sugiantara W, Pramana G, Scotch M, Burke DS (2008) Spatial and multidimensional visualization of Indonesia’s village health statistics. Int J Health Geogr 7:30

    Article  Google Scholar 

  23. Ralston JD, Revere D, Robins LS, Goldberg HI (2004) Patients’ experience with a diabetes support program based on an interactive electronic medical record: qualitative study. Br Med J 328:1159

    Article  Google Scholar 

  24. Reinhart I, Dawood K, Shafiq O, Alhajj R, Rokne J, Edworthy S (2011) Electronic medical referral system: a forum-based approach. In: Proceedings of IEEE international conference on e-Health networking, applications and services (HealthCom 2011)

  25. StatsCan. Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) 2007 Questionnaire. http://www.statcan.gc.ca/imdb-bmdi/instrument/3226_Q1_V4-eng. Accessed 27 April 2014

  26. Stroetmann KA, Pieper M, Stroetmann VN (2003) Understanding patients: participatory approaches for the user evaluation of vital data presentation. In: Proceedings of ACM conference on universal usability. Vancouver, BC, pp 93–97

  27. Tuchinda R, Knoblock CA (2005) Interactively building agents for consumer-side data mining. In: Proceedings of the international conference on intelligent user interfaces. San Diego, CA, pp 263–265

  28. Walters DL, Sarela A, Fairfull A, Neighbour K, Cowen C, Stephens B, Sellwood T, Sellwood B, Steer M, Aust M, Francis R, Lee CK, Hoffman S, Brealey G, Karunanithi M (2010) A mobile phone-based care model for outpatient cardiac rehabilitation: the care assessment platform (CAP). BMC Cardiovasc Disord 10:5. doi:10.1186/1471-2261-10-5

  29. Welsch H, Muller K (2014) iBody. https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/ibody-get-in-shape/id306402292?mt=8. Accessed 27 April 2014

  30. Yang Y (2008) The design and implementation of a web mobile-based behavior change application system. In: Proceedings of the 5th international conference on information technology and applications in biomedicine, ITAB 2008. Los Alamitos, CA, pp 491–494

  31. Zhang M, Alhajj R (2009) Effectiveness of NAQ-tree as index structure for similarity search in high-dimensional metric space. Knowl Inf Syst 22(1):1–26

    Article  Google Scholar 

  32. Zhang M, Alhajj R (2012) Effectiveness of NAQ-tree in Handling reverse nearest-neighbor queries in high-dimensional metric space. Knowl Inf Syst 31(2):307–343

    Article  Google Scholar 

  33. Zhang M, Alhajj R, Rokne J (2010) Effectiveness of optimal incremental multi-step nearest-neighbor search. Expert Syst Appl 37(8):6018–6027

    Article  Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Reda Alhajj.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Szeto, J., Lycett, A., Yi, X. et al. Visualization of health indicators: utilizing data mining techniques and statistical analysis for effective comparison of user profiles. Netw Model Anal Health Inform Bioinforma 3, 63 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13721-014-0063-0

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Revised:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13721-014-0063-0

Keywords

Navigation