Tag: Repertorization

iHomeoMate: Generating Simulated Cases

Written by on September 6, 2024 in Homeopathy, iHomeoMate with 0 Comments
iHomeoMate: Generating Simulated Cases

If you are a homeopath who also teaches in a Homeopathy college, one of the interesting challenges you will face regularly is to come up with good case examples that demonstrate the prescription of “correct” remedies. For example, if you are taking a class on “Aurum Met”, after discussing the key features of the remedy, […]

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Using Similarity Search in Homeopathy Repertorization Software – Part 2

Written by on February 21, 2024 in Homeopathy, Python with 0 Comments
Using Similarity Search in Homeopathy Repertorization Software – Part 2

In my earlier article, I had explained how natural language text describing a symptom can be converted to a formal “rubric” by using a vector database. In today’s article, I will show how this can be extended to support multiple symptoms in the input text with automatic repertorisation to identify potential remedies. Let us consider […]

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Using Similarity Search in Homeopathy Repertorization Software

Written by on February 11, 2024 in Homeopathy with 1 Comment
Using Similarity Search in Homeopathy Repertorization Software

Homeopathy Repertorization software such as RadarOpus, MacRepertory, Vithoulkas Compass, and Synergy Homeopathic Software (SHS) are widely used by homeopaths to speed up case taking, repertorization and case analysis. All of them have a “Search” feature, where the given text is searched (typically based on key words and synonyms) against one or more repertories and the […]

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Themes: Desirable Features of Homeopathic Software – Part 2

Written by on November 15, 2015 in Homeopathy with 0 Comments
Themes: Desirable Features of Homeopathic Software – Part 2

In an earlier post, I started to enumerate some features that I would like to see in a good homeopathic software, and how some of those found their way in to iCure, my own software. In this post, I would like to share another interesting feature called Themes. Sometimes when you elicit rubrics from a […]

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