Knowledge acquisition: Past,present and future |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Computer Science and Technology, Shandong University, 250101 Jinan, China;2. Technology Center, Inspur Inc., Jinan, China;1. University Heart Center, Department of Cardiology, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;2. Department of Medicine, GZO Spital Wetzikon, Switzerland;3. Department of Internal Medicine 4, Saarland University Hospital, Homburg/Saar, Germany;4. Department of Surgery, University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland;5. Department of Neonatology, University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland;6. University Pierre et Marie Curie Paris 6, Pitie Salpetriere Hospital, Department of Cardiology, Paris, France;7. Department of Cardiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands;8. 3rd Division of Cardiology, Medical University of Silesia, Katowice, Poland;9. National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College, ICMS Royal Brompton Hospital, London, United Kingdom;10. Department of Cardiology, University Hospital Gasthuisberg, Leuven, Belgium;11. Department of Scientific Programme Management, European Society of Cardiology, Sofia Antipolis, France;12. Zurich Center for Integrative Human Physiology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;13. Ann Arbor Health Services Research and Development Center of Excellence, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine and Center for Health Outcomes and Policy, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, USA |
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Abstract: | As we celebrate the 50th knowledge acquisition conference this year it is appropriate to review progress in knowledge acquisition techniques not only over the quarter century since the conference series began but backwards through the millennia to the beginnings of knowledge capture and forwards through the foreseeable future to speculate on reasonable expectations, appropriate targets and potential surprises in the next quarter century.“Time present and time past are both perhaps present in time future, and time future contained in time past. What might have been is an abstraction remaining a perpetual possibility only in world of speculation.” (T.S. Eliot, Four Quartets). |
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