Camel's head Computer Applications in Medicine Elective

1999 January

1. Read and summarize an article

Due Jan 15.

Choose an article related to computers in medicine. E-mail me the title, author, source, year and page numbers of the article, by Jan 13.

The article must be at least four full pages long, and must have been published in the scientific literature within the past two years. It should discuss a specific medical application of computers, and not be just a general review of how to use the Web.

Prepare a summary (double spaced, about two pages long) using a word processor (preferably either WordPerfect or Word). The summary should include

  1. the objectives of the article;
  2. highlights of the article; and
  3. your own comments about the article.
These three parts should be of roughly equal size and should be clearly indicated by headings.

Your document must contain

E-mail the word-processing document to me as an attachment, with a message stating what word processor was used.

2. Change password

Due Jan 15.

Use Telnet to connect to mystic.biomed.mcgill.ca and login to Unix. Your username is the same as your Medcor username, in lower case.

Change your password to one that only you know, using the passwd command. Your password should be at least six characters long, and should contain a mixture of upper and lower case letters; it can also contain digits.

Remember that you are responsible for anything done using your account.

3. E-mail discussion list

Due Jan 25.

Choose an e-mail discussion list related to health care. Subscribe to the list, and post a description of the list to the Camel bulletin board on WebCT by Jan 15. If, within a day or two, the list appears to be inactive or not what you expected, unsubscribe and choose another one.

Monitor the list for one week and post a brief report about it to the bulletin board. The report should include discussion of items like how busy the list was, the ratio of useful messages to junk messages, how useful the list was, and what audience it might be most useful for.

4. Newsgroup

Due Jan 22.

Choose a newsgroup related to health care. Check the current messages and make sure there are at least a few messages per day. Post the name of the newsgroup and a brief description to the Camel bulletin board on WebCT by Jan 15.

Review the existing messages, and monitor the group for a few days, then post a brief report about it to the bulletin board. The report should include discussion of items like how busy the group was, the ratio of useful messages to junk messages, how useful the group was, and what audience it might be most useful for.

5. WebCT bulletin board

Due: on-going

Contribute to class discussions via the Camel bulletin board on WebCT; e.g., comment on the reports about e-mail discussion lists and newsgroups.

6. Medline search

Due Jan 19.

Do a Medline search related to the topic of the book chapter you're reading, indentifying a small number of recent and particularly relevant articles. The final search itself should produce no more than ten articles, from which you should select the two or three most relevant. E-mail me a concise description of your search strategy and the results. Append the actual search output from Peruse to your e-mail message.

7. Read and summarize book chapter

Due Jan 20.

Read one of the Applications chapters from either Osheroff or Shortliffe & Perreault. Prepare a summary (same requirements as for your article summary, but don't worry about the italics and bold, indenting, header and graphics box) and e-mail it to me as an attachment.

8. Web search

Due Jan 21.

Do a Web search to find two or three Web pages particularly relevant to the chapter you're reading. Do the search using all three of Alta Vista, Yahoo! and Medical World Search, in that order. E-mail me a brief narrative description of your search strategy, and the best two or three links found.

9. Read and summarize a second article

Due Jan 25.

Choose a topic for a second article. The topic should be different from that of the article that you read for Assignment 1. As before, the article must be at least four full pages long; must have been published in the scientific literature within the past two years; and should discuss a specific medical application of computers, and not be just a general review of how to use the Web.

E-mail me a description of the topic by Jan 20.

Prepare a summary, with comments, and include it in your Web site.

10. Creation of Web pages

Due Jan 28.

Prepare Web pages and install on Mystic. As a minimum, you should have HTML files containing the four article and chapter summaries that you've written, plus a home page containing links to the four summaries. Each HTML file must contain the required elements discussed in class.

Create a patient case presentation for display on your Web site. Include a relevant multiple-choice question, with links to pages explaining why each answer is right or wrong. If you bring me an illustration relevant to the case, I'll scan it and give you a GIF file which you can include on your Web page. The material can be either colour or black-and-white. You can bring it to class, and I'll return it after scanning. Note that we can't include copyrighted material on Web pages without permission from the copyright holder.

11. Read and summarize second book chapter

Due Jan 28.

Read one of the Applications chapters from either Osheroff or Shortliffe & Perreault. Prepare a summary, with comments, and include it in your Web site.

12. Binary numbers

Due Jan 22.

Send me an e-mail message containing your birth date with both decimal and binary numbers for the year, month and day. (You only need to include the last two digits of the year, e.g., 96.)

13. Software quiz

Due Jan 25.

Do the Camel software quiz on WebCT.


R.Funnell@med.mcgill.ca
Last modified: Sun Jan 24 07:06:13 1999