Abstract

In 1976, I was involved in one of the earliest evaluations of 5 competing computer programs that interpreted electrocardiograms (ECGs).1 At that time, computer interpretation of ECGs was just beginning to make its way into hospitals in the United States and abroad. Dr Arthur Hagan and I evaluated the accuracy of the different computer interpretations compared with our own experienced analysis of more than 100 ECGs with various well defined abnormalities.

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