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Design and Application of Quantified Self Approaches for Reflective Learning in the Workplace
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ISBN: 1000047818 3731504065 Year: 2015 Publisher: KIT Scientific Publishing

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Learning by reflection is one of the core processes for improving work performance. We provide a novel approach for reflective learning support by transferring and adapting practices from the Quantified Self to workplace settings. This book contributes with an integrated model for technical support of reflective learning, mobile and web-based applications designed for quantifying and gathering data in the workplace, and empirical insights from thirteen studies in three different use cases.


Book
Medienbasierte selbsttechnologien 1800, 1900, 2000
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ISBN: 383944280X 9783839442807 Year: 2018 Publisher: Bielefeld Transcipt Verlag

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Wer bin ich - und wie kann oder sollte ich mich verändern? »Unser Schreibzeug arbeitet mit an unseren Gedanken.« Vor dem Hintergrund dieses Nietzsche-Zitats zeigt Gerrit Fröhlich: Selbstführung ist eng gebunden an die Möglichkeiten, sich medial darzustellen. Wer an sich arbeiten will, greift häufig auf Medien zurück - auf Tagebücher, Listen und Vorher-Nachher-Bilder, immer häufiger aber auch auf Schrittzähler oder Diät-Apps. Die Studie analysiert die Rolle der Medien bei der Selbstführung, gibt einen Überblick über die Formen dieser medienbasierten Selbsttechnologien und beschreibt die wichtigen technischen Zäsuren der letzten zwei Jahrhunderte. Besprochen in: tv diskurs, 90 (2019), Lothar Mikos


Book
Leben nach Zahlen
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ISBN: 3839431360 9783839431368 Year: 2016 Publisher: Bielefeld, GERMANY Transcript Verlag

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Was ändert sich, wenn Selbsterkenntnis zum digitalen Produkt wird? Ob Kalorien, Schritte, Blut- oder Stimmungswerte: Am Körper getragene mobile Geräte messen, überwachen und coachen alltägliches Verhalten und körperliche Leistungen. Die technisch vermittelte Erforschung, Steuerung und Optimierung des Selbst - das sogenannte »Self-Tracking« - etabliert nicht nur neue Verhältnisse von Körper, Technik und Wissen, sondern verwischt gleichermaßen die Grenze zwischen Selbst- und Fremdführung. Die Beiträge des Bandes fragen nach den gesellschaftlichen Bedingungen und den Auswirkungen dieser Transformationen und den damit einhergehenden Veränderungen zeitgenössischer Selbst- und Körperverhältnisse. »Das Buch [sei] allen am Thema interessierten empfohlen.« David Hill, Philosophisches Jahrbuch, 125/1 (2018) »Die Beiträge [bieten] einen guten Einblick in den derzeitigen Forschungsstand zum Thema Self-Tracking.« Lisa Schwaiger, Sociologica Internationalis, 1-2 (2018) »Wie gestaltet sich die ›methodische Lebensführung‹ also heute? Der Band liefert dazu interessante und hilfreiche Hinweise.« Wolfgang Hippe, Kulturpolitische Mitteilungen, 158/3 (2017) »Mit angenehm wenig Hysterie [...] findet der Versuch statt, sich dem Thema aus den unterschiedlichen Forschungsbereichen, wie zum Beispiel Medizin, Fitness, Gamification, Marketing u.v.m. anzunähern. Die einzelnen Artikel bieten interessante Blickwinkel und zeigen spannende Forschungsfelder rund um das Thema ›Self-Tracking‹ auf.« Julia Bast/Aline Braun, http://www.surveillance-studies.org, 20.06.2017 Besprochen in: http://bundeswirtschaftsportal.de, 26.09.2016 http://www.frauenberatenfrauen.at, Bettina Zehetner UniReport, 6 (2016) Gen-ethischer Informationsdienst, 2 (2017), Isabelle Bartram SPOLIT, 11 (2017)


Book
Das quantifizierte Selbst : Zur Genealogie des Self-Trackings
Authors: ---
ISBN: 3839456037 3837656039 3732856038 Year: 2021 Publisher: Bielefeld transcript Verlag

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Im Jahr 2021 sind Self-Tracking-Technologien ein fester Bestandteil gesellschaftlicher Alltagspraxen. In der Gegenwart von Corona-Tracing-Apps und Social Scoring erinnert kaum noch etwas an die frühen Prototypen der technologieenthusiastischen Self-Tracker*innen. Thorben Mämecke wirft einen Blick auf die intensiven Beziehungen, die diese Pionierprojekte untereinander gepflegt haben, und zeichnet dabei die sie bestimmenden Phänomene nach: angefangen bei der Ellenbogenmentalität der prekären Kreativökonomie bis zum progressiven Selbstbestimmtheitsstreben von Self-Tracker*innen mit chronischen Erkrankungen.


Book
The quantified self : a sociology of self-tracking
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ISBN: 9781509500604 9781509500598 1509500596 150950060X Year: 2016 Publisher: Cambridge Polity

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With the advent of digital devices and software, self-tracking practices have gained new adherents and have spread into a wide array of social domains. The Quantified Self movement has emerged to promote ‘self knowledge through numbers’. In this ground-breaking book, Deborah Lupton critically analyses the social, cultural and political dimensions of contemporary self-tracking and identifies the concepts of selfhood, human embodiment and the value of data that underpin them. The book incorporates discussion of the consolations and frustrations of self-tracking as well as the proliferating ways in which people’s personal data are now used beyond their private rationales. Lupton outlines the ways in which the information that is generated by self-tracking now taken up and repurposed for commercial, governmental, managerial and research purposes. Self-tracking has broader implications, therefore, for the ways in which personal data practices are intertwined with big data politics


Book
Laboring Bodies and the Quantified Self
Authors: ---
ISBN: 3839449219 3837649210 Year: 2020 Publisher: Bielefeld transcript Verlag

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The body has become central to practices of self-tracking. By focusing on the relations between quantification, the body, and labor, this volume sheds light on the ways in which discourses on data collection and versions of the ›corporate self‹ are instrumental in redefining concepts of labor, including notions of immaterial and free labor in an increasingly virtual work environment. The contributions explore the functions of quantification in conceptualizing the body as a laboring body and examine how quantification contributes to disciplining the body. By doing so, they also inquire how practices of self-tracking, self-monitoring, and self-optimization have evolved historically.


Book
Technologies of speculation : the limits of knowledge in a data-driven society
Author:
ISBN: 9781479860234 9781479883066 9781479855759 9781479802104 1479860239 1479802107 1479855758 1479883069 Year: 2020 Publisher: New York, N.Y. New York University Press

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An inquiry into what we can know in an age of surveillance and algorithms Knitting together contemporary technologies of datafication to reveal a broader, underlying shift in what counts as knowledge, 'Technologies of Speculation' reframes today's major moral and political controversies around algorithms and artificial intelligence.


Book
Information Technology's Role in Global Healthcare Systems
Authors: ---
Year: 2022 Publisher: Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Over the past few decades, modern information technology has made a significant impact on people’s daily lives worldwide. In the field of health care and prevention, there has been a progressing penetration of assistive health services such as personal health records, supporting apps for chronic diseases, or preventive cardiological monitoring. In 2020, the range of personal health services appeared to be almost unmanageable, accompanied by a multitude of different data formats and technical interfaces. The exchange of health-related data between different healthcare providers or platforms may therefore be difficult or even impossible. In addition, health professionals are increasingly confronted with medical data that were not acquired by themselves, but by an algorithmic “black box”. Even further, externally recorded data tend to be incompatible with the data models of classical healthcare information systems.From the individual’s perspective, digital services allow for the monitoring of their own health status. However, such services can also overwhelm their users, especially elderly people, with too many features or barely comprehensible information. It therefore seems highly relevant to examine whether such “always at hand” services exceed the digital literacy levels of average citizens.In this context, this reprint presents innovative, health-related applications or services emphasizing the role of user-centered information technology, with a special focus on one of the aforementioned aspects.

Keywords

fever --- FeverApp --- ecological momentary assessment --- user behavior --- sociodemographic characteristics --- registry --- guidelines --- feasibility --- usability --- routine health information system --- health management information system --- health system performance --- machine learning --- digital health --- registry analysis --- ClinicalTrials.gov --- device regulation --- new information technology --- Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) --- institution --- institutionalism --- digital informatics --- human–computer interaction --- personal health informatics --- consumer health data --- consumer health information --- self-tracking --- quantified self --- mHealth apps --- telemonitoring --- telemedicine --- telecardiology --- cardiology --- wearable --- sensors --- consumer health devices --- cardiovascular disease --- heart failure --- atrial fibrillation --- mental health --- psychiatry --- psychiatric record --- psychiatric notes --- patient accessible electronic health record --- PAEHR --- open notes --- policies --- COVID-19 --- technology acceptance --- user survey --- wearable health monitor --- ECG patch --- personal electronic health records --- technology adoption --- endogenous motivations --- health information privacy concern --- mixed-methods --- ePA --- online review helpfulness --- signaling theory --- sentiment analysis --- physician rating websites --- consumer decision-making --- health information technology --- information exchange --- hospital --- market


Book
Information Technology's Role in Global Healthcare Systems
Authors: ---
Year: 2022 Publisher: Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Abstract

Over the past few decades, modern information technology has made a significant impact on people’s daily lives worldwide. In the field of health care and prevention, there has been a progressing penetration of assistive health services such as personal health records, supporting apps for chronic diseases, or preventive cardiological monitoring. In 2020, the range of personal health services appeared to be almost unmanageable, accompanied by a multitude of different data formats and technical interfaces. The exchange of health-related data between different healthcare providers or platforms may therefore be difficult or even impossible. In addition, health professionals are increasingly confronted with medical data that were not acquired by themselves, but by an algorithmic “black box”. Even further, externally recorded data tend to be incompatible with the data models of classical healthcare information systems.From the individual’s perspective, digital services allow for the monitoring of their own health status. However, such services can also overwhelm their users, especially elderly people, with too many features or barely comprehensible information. It therefore seems highly relevant to examine whether such “always at hand” services exceed the digital literacy levels of average citizens.In this context, this reprint presents innovative, health-related applications or services emphasizing the role of user-centered information technology, with a special focus on one of the aforementioned aspects.

Keywords

Medicine --- fever --- FeverApp --- ecological momentary assessment --- user behavior --- sociodemographic characteristics --- registry --- guidelines --- feasibility --- usability --- routine health information system --- health management information system --- health system performance --- machine learning --- digital health --- registry analysis --- ClinicalTrials.gov --- device regulation --- new information technology --- Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) --- institution --- institutionalism --- digital informatics --- human–computer interaction --- personal health informatics --- consumer health data --- consumer health information --- self-tracking --- quantified self --- mHealth apps --- telemonitoring --- telemedicine --- telecardiology --- cardiology --- wearable --- sensors --- consumer health devices --- cardiovascular disease --- heart failure --- atrial fibrillation --- mental health --- psychiatry --- psychiatric record --- psychiatric notes --- patient accessible electronic health record --- PAEHR --- open notes --- policies --- COVID-19 --- technology acceptance --- user survey --- wearable health monitor --- ECG patch --- personal electronic health records --- technology adoption --- endogenous motivations --- health information privacy concern --- mixed-methods --- ePA --- online review helpfulness --- signaling theory --- sentiment analysis --- physician rating websites --- consumer decision-making --- health information technology --- information exchange --- hospital --- market --- fever --- FeverApp --- ecological momentary assessment --- user behavior --- sociodemographic characteristics --- registry --- guidelines --- feasibility --- usability --- routine health information system --- health management information system --- health system performance --- machine learning --- digital health --- registry analysis --- ClinicalTrials.gov --- device regulation --- new information technology --- Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) --- institution --- institutionalism --- digital informatics --- human–computer interaction --- personal health informatics --- consumer health data --- consumer health information --- self-tracking --- quantified self --- mHealth apps --- telemonitoring --- telemedicine --- telecardiology --- cardiology --- wearable --- sensors --- consumer health devices --- cardiovascular disease --- heart failure --- atrial fibrillation --- mental health --- psychiatry --- psychiatric record --- psychiatric notes --- patient accessible electronic health record --- PAEHR --- open notes --- policies --- COVID-19 --- technology acceptance --- user survey --- wearable health monitor --- ECG patch --- personal electronic health records --- technology adoption --- endogenous motivations --- health information privacy concern --- mixed-methods --- ePA --- online review helpfulness --- signaling theory --- sentiment analysis --- physician rating websites --- consumer decision-making --- health information technology --- information exchange --- hospital --- market

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