Application of visual analytics to healthcare associated infection
The Centre for Digital Scholarship invites you to join us for a major series on Visual Analytics, led by Margaret Varga, chair of the NATO Exploratory Visual Analytics Research Task Group and visiting fellow at the University of Oxford’s Department of Oncology. Each talk will stand alone, and attending more of them will build to give an overview of this increasingly vital and profoundly interdisciplinary work from a world expert in the field.

We continue the series with:
30 June: Application of visual analytics to healthcare associated infection
Healthcare associated infections (HAI) are of important concern in patient care. This seminar will describe Visual Analytics techniques which have been developed to help detect, monitor, analyse and understand trends, clusters and outbreaks of HAI.
Margaret Varga received her PhD in statistical pattern recognition from the University of Cambridge. She is a director at Seetru Ltd. and is the chairman of the NATO Exploratory Visual Analytics Research Task Group, as well as a visiting fellow at the University of Oxford. Her research interests are in visual analytics, visualisation, uncertainty analysis, network analysis, evidential reasoning, provenance analysis and visualisation, Bayesian reasoning, pattern processing, financial systemic risk and stability monitoring, image processing. Dr. Varga led the team that developed the world’s first automated breast cancer histopathology diagnosis systems, and she holds seven patents for this system. She has over a hundred publications.

For more information, please see:

blogs.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/digital/2016/06/09/visual-analytics
Date: 30 June 2016, 13:00 (Thursday, 10th week, Trinity 2016)
Venue: Weston Library, Broad Street OX1 3BG
Venue Details: Centre for Digital Scholarship
Speaker: Margaret Varga (University of Oxford)
Organising department: Medical Sciences Division
Part of: Medical Sciences Division Events
Booking required?: Not required
Audience: Members of the University only
Editor: Alison Brindle