Kei-Hoi Cheung, PhD
Professor of Biomedical Informatics & Data ScienceCards
About
Research
Overview
Ongoing Projects:
- Yale Protein Expression Database (YPED). YPED is an institution-wide database for use by proteomics researchers at Yale and outside of Yale
- Human Immunology Project Consortium (HIPC). HIPC was established by NIAID, which generates a wide variety of phenotypic and molecular data from well-characterized patient cohorts, including genome-wide
expression profiling, high-dimensional flow cytometry and serum cytokine concentrations. The adoption and adherence
to data standards is critical to enable data integration across HIPC centers, and facilitate data re-use by the wider scientific community. One key component of HIPC involves data standardization effort, along with the infrastructure that has been developed. - Center for Expanded Data Annotation and Retrieval (CEDAR). CEDAR is part of the Big Data to Knowledge (BD2K) initiative funded by NIH. It studies the creation of comprehensive and expressive metadata for biomedical datasets to facilitate data discovery, data interpretation, and data reuse.
- Clinical Natural Language Processing (NLP). To extract and retrieve information from large amounts of clinical notes (unstructured data) for facilitating clinical research, a variety of NLP techniques including the incorporation of ontologies have been explored in different domains including lung/colon cancer, post-traumatic stress disorder, psychogenic nonepileptic seizure, and chronic pain.
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Anesthesiology; Databases, Genetic; Emergency Medicine; Medical Informatics; Natural Language Processing; Technology
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
News & Links
News
- May 15, 2024
Cheung Receives NIH Grant to Research Water Contaminants and Human Health
- October 02, 2023
What Does Natural Language Processing Mean for Biomedicine?
- October 03, 2018Source: Yale Daily News
School of Public Health to offer new degree
- October 24, 2005
Research on Premature Birth Boosted with $10 Million NIH Grant