Academic advisors Ralph Grishman | Name Carol Friedman | |
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Institutions Columbia UniversityQueens College, CUNY Doctoral students Hongfang LiuHua XuLifeng ChenKarina TulipanoXiaoyan WangJung-wei Fan Other notable students Yves A. LussierEneida A. MendoncaAdam WilcoxQing T ZengTrevor CohenMichael KrauthammerPeter Stetson Known for MedLEEMedical language processingGENIES Medical language processing Notable awards AMIA Donald A. B. Lindberg Award for Innovation in Biomedical Informatics, 2010Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, 2006Fellow, ACMI Fields Natural language processing, Electronic health record Institution Columbia University, Queens College, City University of New York |
Carol friedman s advice for young photographers
Carol Friedman is a scientist and biomedical informatician. She is among the pioneers the use of expert systems in Medical language processing and the explicit medical concept representation underpinning the use of Entity–attribute–value modeling underpinning electronic medical records.
Contents
- Carol friedman s advice for young photographers
- 2017 Morris F Collen Award of Excellence Carol Friedman PhD FACMI
- Life
- Publications
- References

2017 Morris F. Collen Award of Excellence: Carol Friedman, PhD, FACMI
Life

Before her doctoral degree, working under the direction of Naomi Sager at New York University, she also contributed to the development of second generation Medical language processing systems. After her doctoral degree in computer science (natural language processing) under Dr. Ralph Grishman at the Courant Institute of Mathematics at New York University, she has developed annotative clinical information systems that have been integrated in the New York–Presbyterian Hospital, and the Columbia University Medical Center.
She is recognized for her development, translation to clinical practice and evaluation of the MedLEE Medical language processing system. MedLEE is in daily use for clinical decision support at NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital. She adapted and evaluated the MedLEE system to build biomolecular and genotype-phenotype networks (GENIES and BioMedLEE respectively). MedLEE and GENIES exemplify the translation to practice of the sub-language theory proposed by Zellig Harris that Dr. Friedman pursued. In summary, she has been demonstrating the value of natural language processing for a broad range of clinical and biomedical applications that include decision support, automated encoding, vocabulary development, sub-language grammar applied to biomedicine, clinical research, outcomes analysis, error detection, and genomics research.
Currently, Dr. Friedman is Professor of Biomedical Informatics at Columbia University. Dr. Friedman was a member of the Board of Regents of the National Library of Medicine from 2007 to 2011, and has published over 150 articles.