37th International Conference on Information Systems, Dublin, Ireland, 11-14 December 2016This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Association for Information Systems via the URL in this record.This paper talks about ways in which infrastructure for biomedical data-intensive discovery is operationalized. Specifically, it is interested in information security solutions and how the processes of scientific research through data-intensive infrastructures are shaped by them. The implications of information security for big data biomedical research have not been discussed in depth by the extant IS literature. Yet, information security might exert a strong influence on the processes and outcomes of data shari...
The BRIDGES project was funded by the UK Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) to address the needs...
This position paper discusses on-going work on architectures and algorithms for efficient but privac...
How many people have had a chronic disease for longer than 5-years in Scotland? How has this impacte...
37th International Conference on Information Systems, Dublin, Ireland, 11-14 December 2016This is th...
This paper talks about ways in which infrastructure for biomedical data-intensive discovery is opera...
This paper analyses the role of information security (IS) in shaping the dissemination and re-use of...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
Big data facilitates the processing and management of huge amounts of data. In health, the main info...
The ever-increasing integration of highly diverse enabled data generating technologies in medical, b...
Managing authorised access to data is crucial in medical research and especially in translational me...
Electronic Health Records (EHRs) contain an increasing wealth of medical information. When combined ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the li...
This open access book describes the technologies needed to construct a secure big data infrastructur...
McEntyre J, Swan A. Health Sciences. In: Meier zu Verl C, Horstmann W, eds. Studies on Subject-Speci...
Data processing is fundamental for medical and biomedical scientific research. Data access and open ...
The BRIDGES project was funded by the UK Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) to address the needs...
This position paper discusses on-going work on architectures and algorithms for efficient but privac...
How many people have had a chronic disease for longer than 5-years in Scotland? How has this impacte...
37th International Conference on Information Systems, Dublin, Ireland, 11-14 December 2016This is th...
This paper talks about ways in which infrastructure for biomedical data-intensive discovery is opera...
This paper analyses the role of information security (IS) in shaping the dissemination and re-use of...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
Big data facilitates the processing and management of huge amounts of data. In health, the main info...
The ever-increasing integration of highly diverse enabled data generating technologies in medical, b...
Managing authorised access to data is crucial in medical research and especially in translational me...
Electronic Health Records (EHRs) contain an increasing wealth of medical information. When combined ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the li...
This open access book describes the technologies needed to construct a secure big data infrastructur...
McEntyre J, Swan A. Health Sciences. In: Meier zu Verl C, Horstmann W, eds. Studies on Subject-Speci...
Data processing is fundamental for medical and biomedical scientific research. Data access and open ...
The BRIDGES project was funded by the UK Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) to address the needs...
This position paper discusses on-going work on architectures and algorithms for efficient but privac...
How many people have had a chronic disease for longer than 5-years in Scotland? How has this impacte...