Understanding the role of technology in enhancing and promoting health from h...debbieholley1
Frailty: Enhancing Lifes
The role technology can play in enhancing the lives of those living with fraility.
Presentation to the 16th Annual Centre of Postgraduate Medical Research & Education (CoPMRE) symposium by Assoc Prof Vanessa Heaslip & Prof debbie Holley,
Professor Pip Logan, Associate Professor in Community Rehabilitation, Univers...Karel Van Isacker
Professor Pip Logan, Associate Professor in Community Rehabilitation, University of Nottingham
Interactive Technologies and Games (ITAG) Conference 2015
Health, Disability and EducationDates: Thursday 22 October 2015 - Friday 23 October 2015 Location: The Council House, NG1 2DT
Thank You for referencing this work, if you find it useful!
Reference/Citation for a latest scientific paper: Katarzyna Wac, Maddalena Fiordelli, Mattia Gustarini, Homero Rivas, Quality of Life Technologies: Experiences from the Field and Key Research Challenges, IEEE Internet Computing, Special Issue: Personalized Digital Health, July/August 2015.
Reference/Citation to the talk: Katarzyna Wac, mHealth Services Science - Science in the Service of Life Quality, ITU Experts Group Meeting held within the framework of the ITU European Regional Initiative on ICT Applications, including e-Health: "m-Health: Towards Better Care, Cure and Prevention in Europe", Switzerland, Sep 2012
Reference/Citation to a scientific paper: Katarzyna Wac, Smartphone as a Personal, Pervasive Health Informatics Services Platform: Literature Review, IMIA Yearbook 2012: Personal Health Informatics, 7(1), pp.83-93.
Training Goals:
1. Improve awareness of and receptivity to using Technology-Assisted Care (TAC) for the treatment of Substance Use Disorders (SUDs)
2. Identify effective TAC interventions for SUDs
3. Demonstrate exemplary TAC interventions
4. Identify strategies/approaches for adoption and integration of TAC into routine clinical practice
5. Explore implementation and integration challenges (e.g., cost, reimbursement, security)
Understanding the role of technology in enhancing and promoting health from h...debbieholley1
Frailty: Enhancing Lifes
The role technology can play in enhancing the lives of those living with fraility.
Presentation to the 16th Annual Centre of Postgraduate Medical Research & Education (CoPMRE) symposium by Assoc Prof Vanessa Heaslip & Prof debbie Holley,
Professor Pip Logan, Associate Professor in Community Rehabilitation, Univers...Karel Van Isacker
Professor Pip Logan, Associate Professor in Community Rehabilitation, University of Nottingham
Interactive Technologies and Games (ITAG) Conference 2015
Health, Disability and EducationDates: Thursday 22 October 2015 - Friday 23 October 2015 Location: The Council House, NG1 2DT
Thank You for referencing this work, if you find it useful!
Reference/Citation for a latest scientific paper: Katarzyna Wac, Maddalena Fiordelli, Mattia Gustarini, Homero Rivas, Quality of Life Technologies: Experiences from the Field and Key Research Challenges, IEEE Internet Computing, Special Issue: Personalized Digital Health, July/August 2015.
Reference/Citation to the talk: Katarzyna Wac, mHealth Services Science - Science in the Service of Life Quality, ITU Experts Group Meeting held within the framework of the ITU European Regional Initiative on ICT Applications, including e-Health: "m-Health: Towards Better Care, Cure and Prevention in Europe", Switzerland, Sep 2012
Reference/Citation to a scientific paper: Katarzyna Wac, Smartphone as a Personal, Pervasive Health Informatics Services Platform: Literature Review, IMIA Yearbook 2012: Personal Health Informatics, 7(1), pp.83-93.
Training Goals:
1. Improve awareness of and receptivity to using Technology-Assisted Care (TAC) for the treatment of Substance Use Disorders (SUDs)
2. Identify effective TAC interventions for SUDs
3. Demonstrate exemplary TAC interventions
4. Identify strategies/approaches for adoption and integration of TAC into routine clinical practice
5. Explore implementation and integration challenges (e.g., cost, reimbursement, security)
Testing technology in the ‘real world’ of acute healthcare: making it work. Presented by Bernice Redley, Deakin University, Australia, at HINZ 2014, 12 November 2014, 12.22pm, Plenary Room
Support Dementia: using wearable assistive technology and analysing real-time data (Fehmida Mohamedali and Nasser Matoorian)
Interactive Technologies and Games (ITAG) Conference 2016
Health, Disability and EducationDates: Wednesday 26 October 2016 - Thursday 27 October 2016 Location: The Council House, NG1 2DT
A Proposed Framework for Supporting Behaviour Change by Translating Personali...Ulster University
The aim of this position paper is to examine the case for supporting behaviour change in pre-diabetic obese people in order to improve their health. The paper sets out the background and motivation for supporting behaviour change before outlining the relevant literature in this health and wellbeing area. The paper then explores the feasibility of SmartLife - a patient-driven application involving healthcare practitioners and peer support interaction with a focus on failure-free, positive reinforcement, patient empowerment and wellbeing.
Pop-up Living Labs: Experiments in Co-creating Service Design with Diverse St...Ulster University
This presentation outlines some experimental work undertaken to help co-create service designs in the healthcare domain of reablement. The presentation outlines the background to the experimental work before reviewing relevant academic literature in the innovation space, specifically encompassing triple-helix concepts and living labs. It then presents the findings from the experimental work before concluding with a discussion on the findings. The discussion is primarily concerned with the usefulness of a novel ‘pop-up’ living lab conception.
Testing technology in the ‘real world’ of acute healthcare: making it work. Presented by Bernice Redley, Deakin University, Australia, at HINZ 2014, 12 November 2014, 12.22pm, Plenary Room
Support Dementia: using wearable assistive technology and analysing real-time data (Fehmida Mohamedali and Nasser Matoorian)
Interactive Technologies and Games (ITAG) Conference 2016
Health, Disability and EducationDates: Wednesday 26 October 2016 - Thursday 27 October 2016 Location: The Council House, NG1 2DT
A Proposed Framework for Supporting Behaviour Change by Translating Personali...Ulster University
The aim of this position paper is to examine the case for supporting behaviour change in pre-diabetic obese people in order to improve their health. The paper sets out the background and motivation for supporting behaviour change before outlining the relevant literature in this health and wellbeing area. The paper then explores the feasibility of SmartLife - a patient-driven application involving healthcare practitioners and peer support interaction with a focus on failure-free, positive reinforcement, patient empowerment and wellbeing.
Pop-up Living Labs: Experiments in Co-creating Service Design with Diverse St...Ulster University
This presentation outlines some experimental work undertaken to help co-create service designs in the healthcare domain of reablement. The presentation outlines the background to the experimental work before reviewing relevant academic literature in the innovation space, specifically encompassing triple-helix concepts and living labs. It then presents the findings from the experimental work before concluding with a discussion on the findings. The discussion is primarily concerned with the usefulness of a novel ‘pop-up’ living lab conception.
Designing Social Prescription Services to Support People with Long-Term Condi...Ulster University
This paper outlines a small study undertaken to assess user perspectives on the concept of social prescription services. Social prescribing is a mechanism linking patients in primary care with non-medical sources of support within the community. The work presented here supports the idea of patients becoming ‘active partners’ by providing health literature that is designed to suit their health literacy along with a service which introduces patients to actual programmes and services in their local area which suit their specific condition. By using innovative digital technology patient engagement is encouraged leading to greater self-care and independence in relation to long-term condition management.
The quantity and quality of sleep has a direct impact on the quality of life for people with dementia and their carers. Many research questions remain to be explored: (1) How to monitor and assess the quantity and quality of sleep objectively and ubiquitously? (2) How does sleep pattern change over the course of various disease types? (3) What variables should be used to assess sleep patterns? (4) What feedback format can be used in telecare service? And (5) What support can be provided to ameliorate sleep disturbances suffered by people with dementia?
The main interest to telecare service is to monitoring shifts in sleep patterns and to flag the unusual patterns, so as to observe the changes of clients’ health condition. In this study we examine three types of sleep information: quantity, quality, and rhythm. The bed sensor and the PIR sensors are triggered by the events in seconds. Events such as turning over in bed could trigger the bed sensor and the bedroom PIR sensor. To remove this type of short time trigger and extract the in-bed and out-of-bed events, various rules were applied. Visual feedback is one of the key issues in telecare systems, as telecare staff and the clients’ carers may be novice ICT users.
A total of n=8 individual participants with dementia completed the 3 month final evaluation phase of the project with fully deployed systems. The different sleep patterns observed between the clients are consistent with the clinical observation that most people with dementia suffer sleep disturbance, have more sleep episodes and lower sleep quality.
It is feasible to detect unusual sleep patterns and monitor the trend of the changes. This system could also be used to provide information for the prevention of the risks of other mental health issues that might be triggered by the sleep disorder.
Using Social Media and Health IT to Promote Health and Wellness and Provide Healthcare Education to Health Workers Manish Nachnani
Telemedicine and Use of Emerging Technologies - Kinect(microsoft) and Augmented Reality Manish Nachnani,
Social Media- Health IT - Behavioural Finance Improving Healthcare Behaviour by Using Social Media and Health 2.0 Manish Nachnani,
Social Media for Health and Wellness Promotion Manish Nachnani,
Explores some of the uses of information and communication technologies in health research advocacy and communication and draws on a research project managed by Healthlink Worldwide
Empowering Patients through Information TechnologiesEleni Kaldoudi
Eleni Kaldoudi, Empowering Patients through Information Technologies, Keynote Speech, IUPESM World Congress 2015Toronto, CanadaJune 7-12, 2015 http://wc2015.org/
Patient empowerment is about enabling the patients to be involved in managing disease and adopting and sustaining health promoting behaviors. Patient empowerment, although a popular concept, is rather ill defined. This lecture aims to elucidate the different meanings and perceptions, together with misconceptions, that surround this construct, and to discuss how patient empowerment relates to current medical methodologies, such as evidence based medicine, and other societal and organizational factors. Furthermore, the lecture will provide an overview of how information and communication technologies are employed to empower patients, with emphasis in chronic patients with comorbidities.
The discussion will first address the “who”. This includes an overview of common health problems that call for empowered patients, the types of patients that normally engage in empowering interventions and the specifics of the stakeholders who design and support such interventions.
Then we will look at the “how”. The discussion here will focus on an overview of the diverse approaches and services that have been deployed to empower patients. This will also include the span of various technologies used and, where applicable, their measured induced outcome for the patient and the health care process.
Although the “who” and “how” of patient empowerment can rather easily be discerned from a literature research, the “what” is rather more elusive. The concept of patient empowerment has emerged as a new paradigm that can help improve medical outcomes while lowering costs of treatment by facilitating self-directed behavior change. Patient empowerment has gained even more popularity since the 1990’s, due to the emergent of eHealth and its focus on putting the patient in the centre of the interest. Current literature provides systematic reviews of the area, and shows that well defined areas (or dimensions) have eventually emerged in the field: education, engagement, and control. Despite such findings, current research lacks of a structured approach towards patient empowerment. In an attempt to shed more light onto the process of empowering patients, this lecture will discuss a newly proposed holistic model of patient empowerment as a cognitive process, where we acknowledge three levels of increasing complexity and importance: awareness, participation, and control.
The lecture will conclude with a proof of concept example of using this approach to develop and evaluate empowerment services for the comorbid cardiorenal patient or the patient at risk of this condition. Open issues and challenges will be presented for discussion with the audience.
Empowering Patients through Information Technologies - WC2015 KeynoteCARRE project
Eleni Kaldoudi, Empowering Patients through Information Technologies, Keynote Speech, IUPESM World Congress 2015, Toronto, Canada, June 7-12, 2015
Patient empowerment is about enabling the patients to be involved in managing disease and adopting and sustaining health promoting behaviors. Patient empowerment, although a popular concept, is rather ill defined. This lecture aims to elucidate the different meanings and perceptions, together with misconceptions, that surround this construct, and to discuss how patient empowerment relates to current medical methodologies, such as evidence based medicine, and other societal and organizational factors. Furthermore, the lecture will provide an overview of how information and communication technologies are employed to empower patients, with emphasis in chronic patients with comorbidities.
The discussion will first address the “who”. This includes an overview of common health problems that call for empowered patients, the types of patients that normally engage in empowering interventions and the specifics of the stakeholders who design and support such interventions.
Then we will look at the “how”. The discussion here will focus on an overview of the diverse approaches and services that have been deployed to empower patients. This will also include the span of various technologies used and, where applicable, their measured induced outcome for the patient and the health care process.
Although the “who” and “how” of patient empowerment can rather easily be discerned from a literature research, the “what” is rather more elusive. The concept of patient empowerment has emerged as a new paradigm that can help improve medical outcomes while lowering costs of treatment by facilitating self-directed behavior change. Patient empowerment has gained even more popularity since the 1990’s, due to the emergent of eHealth and its focus on putting the patient in the centre of the interest. Current literature provides systematic reviews of the area, and shows that well defined areas (or dimensions) have eventually emerged in the field: education, engagement, and control. Despite such findings, current research lacks of a structured approach towards patient empowerment. In an attempt to shed more light onto the process of empowering patients, this lecture will discuss a newly proposed holistic model of patient empowerment as a cognitive process, where we acknowledge three levels of increasing complexity and importance: awareness, participation, and control.
The lecture will conclude with a proof of concept example of using this approach to develop and evaluate empowerment services for the comorbid cardiorenal patient or the patient at risk of this condition. Open issues and challenges will be presented for discussion with the audience.
Health Literacy requirements for patients & health care workers.
Spanish context in the great depression.
UNESCO Assambly 2014. Paris 23-24 January 2014.
Mobile Augmented Teleguidance Based Safety Navigation Concept For Senior Citi...Vadim Kramar
The Mobile Augmented Teleguidance-based Safety Navigation Concept for Senior Citizens article published by the Journal of Finnish Universities of Applied Sciences (№2, 2012)
A multidisciplinary reflexion on health issues of the 21st century could lead to innovative solutions. One of the challenges to overcome in the coming decades is how to support the increasing number of chronic patients in a pressured healthcare ecology. Patients in chronic disease management are expected to increasingly use Information and Communication Technology (ICT) for self-care during their treatment process and for co-decision with health care providers. The application of these types of information and communication technology is looked upon as one of the ways to get both patients and healthcare providers more involved in their treatment and to increase the health related quality of care, according to the WHO. Connecting patients and health care professionals would not only improve the technical system of communicating but also triggers social innovations of care models in which new ways of interacting and deciding improves the diagnostics and treatment. So far, a general overview of the extent and nature of published research involving this subset of ICT-interventions is lacking. Based on a scoping review conducted by Wildevuur e.o cancer was chosen as a case study to research how ICT could support cancer-patients in a person-centred approach to care.
Effecting change by the use of emerging technologies in healthcare: A future vision for u-nursing in 2020
Michelle Honey, School of Nursing, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Karl Øyri, Interventional Centre, Rikshospitalet University Hospital, Oslo, Norway
Susan Newbold, Vanderbilt University School of Nursing, Nashville TN, USA
Amy Coenen, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee College of Nursing, Milwaukee, WI, USA
Hyeoun-Ae Park, College of Nursing, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea
Anneli Ensio, Department of Health Policy and Management, University of Kuopio, Finland
Elvio Jesus, Nursing Research Group of Madeira, Portugal
HSC Event, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g0FakQaUvPM
,digital health ,orcha ,digital phenotype ,dynamic consent ,real world data ,data in the wild ,ecological momentary assessment
This work presents a collection of ‘ethical by design’ principles for considering ethical aspects in the design and implementation of technology-based products and services. It is a work-in-progress describing the need for new, innovative concepts and approaches in ethical design-based thinking. The work argues that design thinking should and can be ‘ethical by design’; that designs should strive to go beyond the ethical guidelines that are set by regulatory bodies and other such governance. This manifesto of ‘ethical by design’ principles is intended to support developers, providers, and users in the collaborative process of inherently and explicitly including ethics into product and service design.
Presented at ECCE 2017, September 19–22, 2017, Umeå, Sweden.
Behavioural Usage Analysis of a Reminiscing App for People Living with Dement...Ulster University
The potential for technology to support memory or enhance cognition for people living with dementia is currently an area of significant interest. The use of traditional reminiscence memory books and latterly digital systems to facilitate reminiscing has been shown to have some benefit for people living with dementia. However, there is a paucity of research that explores how people living with dementia actually interact with digital reminiscence systems. This work presents a new contribution to knowledge from work-in- progress in a feasibility study of facilitated reminiscence for people with dementia and results show promise in understanding the behaviour of users of interactive technologies.
Presented at ECCE 2017, September 19–22, 2017, Umeå, Sweden.
The focus of this ECCE 2017 panel is on digital technology in healthcare and elderly care. The discussions relate to the design of technology and the use of technology for health.
Presented at ECCE 2017, September 19–22, 2017, Umeå, Sweden.
Strategic use of Twitter in Local Government: A Northern Ireland StudyUlster University
This paper presents the results of a survey of Twitter usage in Northern Ireland’s twenty-six councils. The data was gathered in Summer 2012. The research questions were developed from a review of the literature on use of social media by government and focused on the role of social media as a communication channel to local government, examining the dialogue between government and citizen and the sentiment of such dialogue. The results show significant heterogeneity in Twitter use amongst the councils; with many not engaging at all, while a small number were highly engaged with their citizens. Regardless of the perspectives of the councils, there was evidence that there was a demand from the citizens for conversations that was not being met by the councils. The paper recommends that councils need to define a social media strategy in order to maximise the use of social media, but reflects that the councils should find it easy to engage with citizens by simply asking them via Twitter.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
Biological screening of herbal drugs: Introduction and Need for
Phyto-Pharmacological Screening, New Strategies for evaluating
Natural Products, In vitro evaluation techniques for Antioxidants, Antimicrobial and Anticancer drugs. In vivo evaluation techniques
for Anti-inflammatory, Antiulcer, Anticancer, Wound healing, Antidiabetic, Hepatoprotective, Cardio protective, Diuretics and
Antifertility, Toxicity studies as per OECD guidelines
The simplified electron and muon model, Oscillating Spacetime: The Foundation...RitikBhardwaj56
Discover the Simplified Electron and Muon Model: A New Wave-Based Approach to Understanding Particles delves into a groundbreaking theory that presents electrons and muons as rotating soliton waves within oscillating spacetime. Geared towards students, researchers, and science buffs, this book breaks down complex ideas into simple explanations. It covers topics such as electron waves, temporal dynamics, and the implications of this model on particle physics. With clear illustrations and easy-to-follow explanations, readers will gain a new outlook on the universe's fundamental nature.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of LabourWasim Ak
Normal labor is also termed spontaneous labor, defined as the natural physiological process through which the fetus, placenta, and membranes are expelled from the uterus through the birth canal at term (37 to 42 weeks
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
Delivering Micro-Credentials in Technical and Vocational Education and TrainingAG2 Design
Explore how micro-credentials are transforming Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) with this comprehensive slide deck. Discover what micro-credentials are, their importance in TVET, the advantages they offer, and the insights from industry experts. Additionally, learn about the top software applications available for creating and managing micro-credentials. This presentation also includes valuable resources and a discussion on the future of these specialised certifications.
For more detailed information on delivering micro-credentials in TVET, visit this https://tvettrainer.com/delivering-micro-credentials-in-tvet/
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
3. My experience in national and international
collaborative research
Experience
4. ¨ Develop and evaluate a user-validated remotely
configurable cognitive prosthetic device with
associated services for people with mild dementia
¨ Helping people navigate their day:
¤ Reminding function
¤ Activity support
¤ Activity assistance
¤ Safety warnings
Mulvenna, M.D., Nugent, C.D. (Eds.), Supporting People with Dementia Using Pervasive Health
Technologies, Series: Advanced Information and Knowledge Processing, 2010, 238 pages, Springer
5. Next Generation Services
¨ Health & Wellbeing Benefits:
¤ Prolonged independent living
¤ Increased physical and psychological health and
wellbeing
¤ Improved motivation and self-management of health
¤ Increased sense of wellbeing and security
¤ More efficient, cost-effective, and targeted delivery of
services
¤ More accessible communication systems
Advisory Committee on Older and Disabled People, (2010) Next Generation Services for Older and
Disabled People, Ofcom ACOD, Last accessed January 2013 at http://goo.gl/ApRwB
6. ¨ Provide therapeutic support and guidance to this
group of people during the hours of darkness
¤ Investigate the needs of people with dementia at night
time
¤ Research new technologically-based therapeutic
interventions capabilities
¤ Sleep measurements variables: quantity of sleep,
quality of sleep, rhythm of sleep
Mulvenna, M.D., et al (2011) Visualization of Data for Ambient Assisted Living Services, IEEE
Communications, January 2011, 49(1): 110-117.
7. ¨ Investigating the unmet needs of
older people living in the local
community (in a variety of living
accommodation), by talking with
older people in order to prioritise
problems, seeking the best
available evidence to meet needs,
and working with people to
implement and evaluate the
evidence in practice.
Beamish, E., McDade, D., Mulvenna, M.D., Martin, S., Soilemezi, D., (2012) Better Together: The
TRAIL User Participation Toolkit for Living Labs, University of Ulster, 108 pages,
8. ¨ Significant technical complexity
¨ Getting results outside lab is still
difficult
¨ Integration of technologies is
troublesome
¨ Consistency of results difficult to
achieve
¨ Need for person-centred approach
¨ Participants like being part of process
Mulvenna, M.D., Lightbody, G., Thomson, E., McCullagh, P., Ware, M., Martin, S., (2012) Realistic
Expectations with Brain Computer Interfaces, Journal of Assistive Technologies, 6(4): 233-245.
9. ¨ New products and services
developed through participatory
research with older people and
triple-helix partners in Northern
Ireland, Norway, and Sweden
¨ The products and services focus on
mobile safety alarms, prescribed
self treatment and mobile-based
social networks.
Mulvenna, M.D., et al. (2010) Towards Sustainable Business Models From Healthcare Technology
Research, International Journal of Computers in Healthcare, 1(1): 20-35.
10. Research strategy
Bougiouklis, K., Papageorgiou, D., Mulvenna, M.D., Koumpis, A., Dogac, A., Akcay, B., Kirisci, P.,
(2006) Towards Successful Participation in European ICT Research: Advice on Research Strategy and
Action Planning, IST-BONUS, 110 pages
19. Systemic innovation
Innovation
for the User
Functional
Innovation
Service
Innovation
Clinical
Innovation
Organisational
Innovation
Based on Fulop et al 2005, in Lewis et al (2010)
20. Systemic innovation à Normative innovation
Innovation
for the User
Functional
Innovation
Service
Innovation
Clinical
Innovation
Organisational
Innovation
Based on Fulop et al 2005, in Lewis et al (2010)
Open data
Hacker Labs
NESTA
X-Discipline
ABC
C-TRIC
Living Labs
eParticipation
Triple-Helix
Partnerships
21. A University of Ulster Innovation Lab
visit trail.ulster.ac.uk
THANKS…
Tel: 02890368602
Email: md.mulvenna@ulster.ac.uk
Web: trail.ulster.ac.uk
Twitter: @mauricemulvenna