→information science(Definition ofinformaticsfrom theCambridge Business English Dictionary? Cambridge University Press)
Examplesofinformatics
informaticsInformaticsstudies the structure, behaviour, and interactions of natural and artificial systems that store, process, and communicate information.From theCambridge English CorpusThose authors identified six factors that will successfully help nurses in nursinginformatics, including strong leadership, effective communication and organized training sessions.From theCambridge English CorpusContinuing education through open and distance learning is an attractive way to acquireinformaticsskills.From theCambridge English CorpusIn many ways, telemedicine is a subset of medicalinformatics, itself a rapidly developing field.From theCambridge English CorpusWhat kinds of database andinformaticsdo we need to develop to have collections of data from many sources usable in one place?From theCambridge English CorpusThis situation results in utilizing existing materials developed for health or medicalinformaticscourses, or using materials from outside the health-care sector.From theCambridge English CorpusConsumerinformaticssupporting patients as co-producers of quality.From theCambridge English CorpusAt the same time, hospitalinformaticsand statistics departments have started developing quality-of-care assessment projects in collaboration with clinicians.From theCambridge English CorpusThese include communication skills, infection control, healthinformatics, clinical educator support and management skills.From theCambridge English CorpusThe paper explores these issues in detail, considering the combined effects ofinformaticsand chemical constraints on the composition of the natural and alternative alphabets.From theCambridge English CorpusAt least in part, the idea that information in the lexicon must be minimised appears to arise from the history of the field ofinformatics.From theCambridge English CorpusInformaticsincludes the science of information, the practice of information processing, and the engineering of information systems.From theCambridge English CorpusSince computers, individuals, and organizations all process information,informaticshas computational, cognitive, and social aspects.From theCambridge English CorpusEach bacterium is, by itself, a biotic autonomous system with its own internal cellular gel that possessesinformaticscapabilities (storage, processing and interpretation of information).From theCambridge English CorpusTaken independently, each of these objectives is much narrower than the issues posed by engineeringinformatics.From theCambridge English CorpusThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.#https://dictionary.cambridge.org//dictionary/english/informatics##