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Persons using assistive technology might not be able to fully access information in this file. For assistance, please send e-mail to: mmwrq@cdc.gov. Type 508 Accommodation and the title of the report in the subject line of e-mail. What's Strange About Recent Events, Version 3.0 --- Accounting for a Changing BaselineWeng-Keen Wong,1 A.
Moore,1 G. Cooper,2 M.
Wagner2
Corresponding author: Weng-Keen Wong, University of Pittsburgh, 200 Lothrop St., 8084 Forbes Tower, Pittsburgh, PA 15213. Telephone: 412-246-5824; Fax: 412-246-5985; E-mail: wwong@cbmi.pitt.edu. AbstractIntroduction: This paper extends the algorithm outlined in an earlier version of this paper by detecting anomalous patterns in health-care data while accounting for temporal trends in the data (e.g., fluctuations caused by day-of-week effects and seasonal variations in temperature and weather). Objectives: What's Strange About Recent Events (WSARE) 2.0 compared the distribution of recent data against a baseline distribution obtained from raw historic data. However, this baseline is affected by different fluctuations in the data (e.g., day-of-week effects and seasonal variations). Creating the baseline distribution without taking such trends into account can lead to unacceptably high false-positive counts and slow detection times. Methods: This paper replaces the baseline method of WSARE 2.0 with a Bayesian network, which produces the baseline distribution by taking the joint probability distribution of the data and conditioning on attributes that are responsible for the trends. Results: WSARE 3.0 is evaluated on a simulator that contains different temporal trends. Annotated results on real emergency department data are also included. Conclusions: WSARE 3.0 is able to detect outbreaks in simulated data with almost the earliest possible detection time while keeping a low false-positive count.
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This page last reviewed 10/4/2004
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