Edward Shortliffe
Updated: 11/16/2019 by Computer Hope
Name: Edward Hance Shortliffe
Born: August 28, 1947, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Computer-related contributions
- Canadian-born American physician, and computer scientist known for MYCIN and Biomedical informatics.
- Frontrunner in the use of artificial intelligence in medicine.
- Chief developer of the clinical expert system MYCIN, one of the first rule-based artificial intelligence expert systems. It obtained clinical data interactively from a physician, and was used to diagnose and recommend treatment for severe infections.
Significant publications
- Rule-Based Expert Systems: The MYCIN Experiments of the Stanford Heuristic Programming Project (1984).
- Readings in Medical Artificial Intelligence: The First Decade (1984).
- Medical Informatics: Computer Applications in Health Care (1990).
- An Integrated Oncology Workstation (1991).
- Medical Informatics: Computer Applications in Health Care and Biomedicine (2000).
- Biomedical Informatics: Computer Applications in Health Care and Biomedicine (2006).
Honors and awards
- Morris F. Collen Award for Distinguished Contributions to Medical Informatics, American Medical Informatics Association, November (2006).
- Appointed Rolf H. Scholdager Professor of Biomedical Informatics, Columbia University, June (2005).
- National Associate, National Academies, Washington, DC, December (2004).
- Mastership, American College of Physicians, November (2002).
- Young Investigator Award, Western Society for Clinical Investigation, February (1987).
- Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation Faculty Scholar in General Internal Medicine, (July 1983—June 1988).
- Research Career Development Award, National Library of Medicine, (July 1979—June 1984).
- Grace Murray Hopper Award (Distinguished computer scientist under age 30), Association for Computing Machinery, (1976).