Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 15
pro vyhledávání: '"Anna Lea Weihrer"'
Autor:
Charles A. Steinberg, Anna Lea Weihrer, Patrick A. Gorman, Juan B. Calatayud, Robert J. Dobrow, Cesar A. Caceres
Publikováno v:
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 118:85-102
Publikováno v:
The Journal of the American Dental Association. 73:644-647
When the more than 1,400 electrocardiograms recorded during the Health Evaluation Program at the 106th annual session of ADA were interpreted by a computer, results resembled those of previous years when cardiologists read the electrocardiograms.
Autor:
Anna Lea Weihrer, William R. Ayers, Sidney Abraham, Steven A. Ward, César Cáceres, Stuart Rosner
Publikováno v:
Computers and Biomedical Research. 2:220-228
Publikováno v:
Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal. 15:390-398
Autor:
Robert C. Leinbach, Andrew J. Presto, Anna Lea Weihrer, Cesar A. Caceres, Larry Jackson, Stuart Rosner
Publikováno v:
The American Journal of Cardiology. 20:356-362
A computer system has been developed to analyze the exercise electrocardiogram. Every 6 seconds the computer program searches for a region free of artifact and shifting baseline. Once a region is located, amplitudes are measured and corrected to a ho
Publikováno v:
Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology. 23:566-570
Summary A digital computer program has been constructed which defines those visually apparent maxima and minima in a way comparable to that of a human electroencephalographer. The program computes wave parameters from the time and amplitude values of
Publikováno v:
Computers and biomedical research, an international journal. 2(3)
Manual measurement of the forced expiratory spirogram (FES) is time consuming, tedious, and subject to observer variation. Application of computer capabilities to the acquisition, analysis and interpretation of the FES has led to the development of a
Publikováno v:
Angiology. 20(4)
Publikováno v:
American journal of ophthalmology. 70(6)
Publikováno v:
ACM National Conference
The most widespread use of computers by hospitals to date is for administrative purposes. In contrast to these essentially nonmedical uses, the Instrumentation Field Station of the United States Public Health Service and other medical groups have dev