OVERVIEW
The purpose of this page is to track CRG priorities and work related to review and clean up of the observable entity hierarchy as it related to the following kinds of perception:
- visual perception (seeing)
- auditory perception (hearing)
- gustatory perception (tasting)
- olfactory perception (smelling)
- tactile perception (touching)
- tactile temperature perception
- tactile vibration perception
Summary of Findings:
- Concepts referring to sensation and perception are frequently conflated
- This is more difficult to disentangle in the |Clinical history / examination observable (observable entity) | subhierarchy than it is in the | Function (observable entity) | hierarchy
- The scope of work relevant to the MABH-CRG are concepts in the | Function (observable entity) | hierarchy
- Review of the the |Clinical history / examination observable (observable entity) | hierarchy may be more appropriate for SMEs in neurology and the specialties that deal with each of the sensory systems (e.g., ophthalmology, audiology, etc.).
- There is inconsistency in the modeling of concepts related to ability to perceive stimuli via each of the sensory modalities that needs to be addressed
- action item: Daniel Karlsson and Piper Allyn Ranallo to discuss
- This is more difficult to disentangle in the |Clinical history / examination observable (observable entity) | subhierarchy than it is in the | Function (observable entity) | hierarchy
- There is inconsistency in terms used in FSNs across sensory modality (e.g., concept for touch perception function has FSN 'touch perception', while concept for visual perception function has FSN 'visual perception function')
- There are gaps in concepts across sensory modalities (e.g., concepts exist for sensory functions but not perception functions for some modalities)
- It's unclear how "sensory function status: x' differs from 'x observable' (see table below) (note: these observables appear to be used in clinical findings to indicate that sensory function is intact)
- action item: discuss whether it is more appropriate to model those findings using the appropriate concept from the | Function (observable entity) | subhierarchy rather than the sensory function status concept in the |Clinical history / examination observable (observable entity) | )
Activities To Date:
Uma Vaidyanathan led the review of sensory and perception concepts in the |Observable entity (observable entity) | hierarchy, including review of the gold standard textbook written on Sensation and Perception (add link here). Piper Allyn Ranallo reviewed and harmonized the definitions of concepts in the UMLS (add link here, add artifacts below). The team created graphics depicting current and proposed concepts for perception, sensation, and integrated sensory perception (add links for graphics here).
Immediate Next Steps (in process)
- The CRG is working with Daniel Karlsson to understand what changes are required in the the observable entity hierarchy
- Requesting editorial guidance around modeling functions, processes and states in the observable entity hierarchy
- The CRG is working to understand the distinction between processes modeled in the | Process (qualifier value)| and |Process (observable entity)| hierarchies
FUNCTIONS, PROCESSES AND OTHER OBSERVABLE ENTITIES
Modality | Unqualified Function | Perception Function | Sensation Function | Unqualified 'observable of' (sensation of) | Sensory Function Status | Ability to / Ability to sense |
Hear | Hearing function | no concept | no concept | Hearing observable | Sensory function status: hearing | Ability to hear |
See | Visual function | Visual perception function | no concept | Vision observable | Sensory function status: vision | Ability to see |
Smell | Sense of smell function | no concept | no concept | no concept | Sensory function status: taste and smell | Ability to smell |
Taste | Taste function | no concept | no concept | no concept | Sensory function status: taste and smell | Ability to taste |
Touch | no concept | Touch perception1 | Touch sensation1 | Observable of sensation of touch | Sensory function status: cutaneous | Ability to sense touch |
1 Function is implied based on parent concept (|Function (observable entity)|
X Function (function) | Any function involved in sensation (sensory transduction and transmission of sensory information to brain) and perception (generation of mental representation) of stimuli in the particular sensory modality |
X Sensation Function (function) | Sensory transduction and transmission of sensory information to brain in the particular sensory modality |
X Perception Function (function) | Generation of mental representation of real or imagined sensory stimulus in the particular sensory modality |
Observable of (sensation of) X (process, quality, or disposition) | Observable of any function related to sensation and perception of stimuli in the particular sensory modality
|
Sensory function status: X (quality) | Need to better understand the meaning of status here |
Ability to (quality) | Need to better understand the relationship between a function and an ability - a function is what endows a person with the capacity to realize processes and thus states (defined as qualities or dispositions) whereas an ability seems to be a summary statement about the quality of the function (what is this quality exactly - pathology, other?) |
Questions
Do concepts where the FSN has the term 'function' qualified only by the sensory modality term (i.e., hearing function, visual function) refer to any function (i.e., either sensory or perception function)?
TYPES OF OBSERVABLE ENTITY CONCEPTS
Action items:
- Discuss diagram below with Daniel Karlssonand James R. Campbell and update based on discussion
- Get input on relationship between function, processes and state constructs from NIH RDoC team via Uma Vaidyanathan
SENSATION CONCEPTS
CONCEPT | ACTION | INHERENT LOCATION | CONCEPT MODELING PREREQUISITIES | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Auditory function | ||||
Auditory sensory function | Peripheral auditory system (body structure) | Body structure hierarchy does not appear to be accurate and complete | ||
Auditory perception function |
PERCEPTION CONCEPTS
SUBSUMPTION RELATIONSHIPS (INITIAL)
Figure 1: Current State - SNOMED International Daily Build 2021.01.20
FUNCTION (PROPOSED)
CLINICAL HISTORY / EXAMINATION OBSERVABLES (PROPOSED)
OBSERVABLE ENTITIES: SENSORY AND PERCEPTION FUNCTION CONCEPTS (PROPOSED)
Three major high level concepts:
- | Sensory function (observable entity) |
- | Perception function (observable entity) |
- | Sensory perception function (observable entity) |
For each sensory modality (X = visual, auditory, olfactory, gustatory, tactile):
- | X Function (observable entity) |
- | X Sensory function (observable entity) |
- | X Perception function (observable entity) |
- | X Sensory perception function (observable entity) |
OBSERVABLE ENTITIES: ABILITY CONCEPTS (CURRENT)
Note the inconsistency across sensory modalities:
NOTES
Modality | Parent observable type | FSN |
---|---|---|
vision (seeing) | function | |
audition (hearing) | function | |
tactile (touch) AND subtypes of touch (temperature, vibration) | function | includes term 'sense' |
olfaction (smell) | observable | |
gustation (taste) | observable |