Spearcons for Patient Monitoring: Program of Laboratory-Based Feasibility Studies

Clinicians are not always at their patients’ bedsides and may therefore need ways of remotely monitoring the well-being of multiple patients under their care. We outline the main findings of a research program investigating whether the intermittent presentation of short phrases of time-compressed sp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting 2019-11, Vol.63 (1), p.663-667
Hauptverfasser: Li, Simon Y. W., Yeung, Chun-Wan, Davidson, Thomas, Ryu, Younji, Srbinovska, Monika, Salisbury, Isaac, Loeb, Robert G., Sanderson, Penelope M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Clinicians are not always at their patients’ bedsides and may therefore need ways of remotely monitoring the well-being of multiple patients under their care. We outline the main findings of a research program investigating whether the intermittent presentation of short phrases of time-compressed speech (spearcons) is an effective way of giving mobile clinicians information about their patients without annoying either clinician or patient. We provide a high-level overview of several studies investigating participants’ ability to understand spearcons, both individually and in sequences representing multiple patients. We then report in more detail a recent small study testing whether participants’ ability to understand spearcons is compromised by different kinds of ongoing tasks. Finally, we outline further issues that should be addressed and further research studies performed before spearcons could be considered a viable tool for patient monitoring.
ISSN:2169-5067
1071-1813
2169-5067
DOI:10.1177/1071181319631258