Dementia Research
‘An Ontology to Represent Dementia and Dementia Care Knowledge in Computer Readable Format’
University of Wollongong, NSW
Awarded 2018
Co-funded by Rotary Club of Woy Woy
‘Eric Abraham’s PhD Scholarship
“I witnessed the hard work of care workers, and the daily living of residents. This experience has developed my appreciation for aged care and a deep commitment to develop digital solutions to enable care staff to provide best care to residents.”
Researcher Profile
Zhenyu Zhang is a PhD candidate at University of Wollongong under the supervision of A/Prof. Ping Yu, Prof. Chao Deng, Dr. Rita Chang, and Dr. Sim Lau. She holds Research Master of Information and Communication Technology, Master of Health Informatics from University of Wollongong, and Bachelor of Information Management and Information System from Liaoning University, China.
Her research interest is the design, adoption, usage and impact of digital technology in health and aged care. Her current research interests focus on developing an ontology, similar to a knowledge classification system, to represents dementia and dementia care knowledge in computer-readable format.
Project Summary
How to effectively support the caregivers to manage behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) has been a long standing, big challenge. Person-centred care for people with dementia is yet to be developed and implemented in residential aged care facilities (RACFs). To date, a large volume of personal health data has been generated in the process of dementia care, such as nursing documentation, medical records, relative and friends’ inputs. However, the valuable information in these data sets has not been effectively used to guide person-centred dementia care. Application of data mining and machine learning technology in personal health data can offer enormous opportunity for us to better understand a person with dementia, what makes the person happy or upset, which symptoms indicate the onset of BPSD, etc.
For health data science to achieve this promise, first we need to code dementia knowledge in a computer readable format, i.e., to build a computer readable dementia care data classification system, which we call ontology. Therefore, the aim of this PhD project is to develop a dementia care ontology that represents the knowledge of dementia and dementia care in computer-readable format. This ontology can provide a tool for mapping information from different computer data sources to generate insight about a person with dementia and how to better manage the person’s symptoms of dementia for caregivers. It can also be used to extract quality dementia and dementia care information efficiently; and to produce easily understandable health reports for a variety of users.
Supervisors: Associate Professor Ping Yu, Professor Chao Deng, Dr Hui Chen (Rita) Chang, Dr Sim Lau