Search results for "Ethical issues"

showing 10 items of 34 documents

Use of Movies in an accounting class as a teaching technique to promote learning about financial reporting and ethical issues

2021

[EN] This study presents an innovative experience using movies in an accounting class. The learning experience was found interesting and useful for the learning process in three groups in University XXX. The students voluntarily watched three movies and answered a test for each one, containing questions about the ethical and accounting concepts in the film, as well as their satisfaction with the methodology. Non-parametric tests have been computed to assess if those students that watch a movie obtain a higher exam mark as compared to those that do not follow the methodology, as well as for the other accounting and ethical questions. Our results show that there is a particular film that evid…

EthicsClass (computer programming)MotivationEthical issuesHigher educationbusiness.industryTeachingEducational systemsHigher EducationWork (electrical)AccountingComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONLearningEngineering ethicsSociologybusinessEducational systemsFilms
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Chances and Challenges of Computational Data Gathering and Analysis

2015

Digital and social media and large available data-sets generate various new possibilities and challenges for conducting research focused on perpetually developing online news ecosystems. This paper presents a novel computational technique for gathering and processing large quantities of data from Facebook. We demonstrate how to use this technique for detecting and analysing issue-attention cycles and news flows in Facebook groups and pages. Although the paper concentrates on a Finnish Facebook group as a case study, the demonstrated method can be used for gathering and analysing large sets of data from various social network sites and national contexts. The paper also discusses Facebook pla…

Facebookcomputational data gathering020205 medical informaticsComputer scienceissue-attention cycledata warehouse050801 communication & media studies02 engineering and technologynews flowsWorld Wide WebComputational Technique0508 media and communications0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringSocial mediata518semi-public datata113hybrid news ecosystemData collectionEthical issuesSocial networkbusiness.industryCommunication05 social sciencesOnline research methodsData warehousedigital and social media researchbusinessDigital Journalism
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The significance of the concept of sin for bioethics.

2005

After a period during which the theological categories of sin and forgiveness were ignored or trivialized, presently these notions are being rediscovered. What could their impact be on bioethics, either in the narrow sense of medical ethics, or in the more encompassing sense of the ethics of the life sciences? This essay begins with describing the processes of transcending and ethitization, which gave rise to the biblical notion of sin. It portrays the theological foundation of sin in terms of a twofold refusal of proper relations to God and other humans. Through the practise of confession in the face of God (coram deo), sin is placed into a horizon of hope for forgiveness and reconciliatio…

ForgivenessPhilosophymedia_common.quotation_subjectReligious studiesMedicine (miscellaneous)Face (sociological concept)Foundation (evidence)BioethicsBioethicsConfessionChristianityEpistemologyPhilosophySurplus valueHumansTheologyBioethical IssuesTheologyMedical ethicsPeriod (music)media_commonChristian bioethics
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Robots Like Me: Challenges and Ethical Issues in Aged Care.

2018

Robots have become a big issue in the twenty-first century, not least in elderly assistance. There are hopes that robots will make aged-care jobs less demanding, for example, they could help senior citizens maintain a longer independent life in their own home, assist caregivers in the nursing home, or provide company to the lonely. However, there are different opinions about the use of robots in our society. In 2012, a survey was conducted in 27 EU countries to examine the public's attitudes toward robots (Special Eurobarometer 382).1 More than 26.000 European citizens responded about the areas where they believe robots should be used as a priority or banned. The survey indicated that, in g…

GerontologyOpinionlcsh:BF1-9900603 philosophy ethics and religionconsciousnessemotionsBirth rate51003 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineartificial agentsPsychology030212 general & internal medicineAged careGeneral PsychologycompanionsEthical issuesEurobarometer06 humanities and the artscare robotsethicslcsh:PsychologyDemographic changeLife expectancyRobot060301 applied ethicsPsychologyDeveloped countryFrontiers in psychology
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Getting Connected

2009

The large scale deployment of mobile applications inevitably impacts upon our culture as a whole and affects more intimately our daily lives. Not all of these effects are desirable. In a market economy, ethical issues are not the most important drivers in the development of technology. In this article, we ask whether the mobile human-computer interaction community could take an active role in discussing ethical issues. In so doing we could focus our attention on developing technology for ‘human beings’ rather than fine tuning our emerging gadgets.

Human-Computer InteractionEthical issuesManagement scienceSoftware deploymentbusiness.industryG400Scale (social sciences)Internet privacyBusinessInternational Journal of Mobile Human Computer Interaction
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What are the ethical issues in relation to the role of the family in intensive care?

2017

International audience; A large proportion of patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) are unable to express themselves, often due to acute illness, shock or trauma, and this precludes any communication and/or consent for care that might reflect their wishes and opinions. In such cases, the only solution for the ICU physician is to include the patient's family in the healthcare decisions. This can represent a significant burden on the family, on top of the psychological distress of the ICU environment and hospitalisation of their relatives, and many family members may suffer from anxiety, depression or symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) during or after the hospitali…

Intensive care unit (ICU)medicine.medical_specialtyfamilyMEDLINEReview Articlelaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinelawIntensive careHealth careMedicine030212 general & internal medicineIntensive care medicineDepression (differential diagnoses)Ethical issuesbusiness.industrycommunicationsatisfactionPsychological distress030208 emergency & critical care medicine[ SDV.SPEE ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologieGeneral MedicineIntensive care unitethics3. Good healthAnxiety[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologiemedicine.symptombusiness
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Ethical issues of gamified ICT tools for higher education

2015

A recent trend in e-learning is the development of ICT tools with game elements to increase the motivation of using new technology in teaching and learning. In most cases, games possess different ethical constraints than regular e-learning systems. For this reason, additional implications and issues deriving from the combined development of games and e-learning technology have to be considered. During the development process of gamified e-learning systems as well as during the use of gamified ICT tools in education special attention must be paid to ethical constraints. This paper presents ethical considerations as to how to properly motivate teachers to adopt new technology in their teachin…

Knowledge managementEthical issuesHigher educationbusiness.industryInformation and Communications TechnologyOrder (exchange)Process (engineering)Computer scienceIct toolsContext (language use)businessEngineering design process2015 IEEE Conference on e-Learning, e-Management and e-Services (IC3e)
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Is it wrong to deliberately conceive or give birth to a child with mental retardation?

2002

This paper discusses the issues of deciding to have a child with mental retardation, and of terminating a pregnancy when the future child is known to have the same disability. I discuss these problems by criticizing a utilitarian argument, namely, that one should act in a way that results in less suffering and less limited opportunity in the world. My argument is that future parents ought to assume a strong responsibility towards the well-being of their prospective children when they decide to reproduce. The moral point in cases in which our acts affect the well-being of future children should be expressed strictly in terms of parents' culpability. Future children thus do not have current m…

MaleMoral ObligationsParentsHealth Knowledge Attitudes PracticeWrongful LifeAbortionArgumentPregnancyIntellectual DisabilityEugenicsmedicineWrongful lifeHumansSociologyBioethical IssuesGenetic TestingChildPhilosophical methodologySocial ResponsibilityGeneral MedicineMental illnessmedicine.diseasehumanitiesDisabled ChildrenPhilosophyIssues ethics and legal aspectsFemaleEthical TheorySocial responsibilitySocial psychologyAbortion EugenicCulpabilityThe Journal of medicine and philosophy
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On the current neuroenhancement use of transcranial direct current stimulation by healthy individuals—A non-fictional snap-shot: Commentary on Lapent…

2014

This commentary examines the pros and cons of the fictitious enhancement scenarios used in Lapenta et al. 2014. Then it gives a non-fictional impression of the current self-enhancement use of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) by healthy individuals and discusses the ethical issues involved.

Neuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyEthical issuesTranscranial direct-current stimulationGeneral Neurosciencemedicine.medical_treatmentShot (filmmaking)Healthy individualsmedicineNeuroenhancementCurrent (fluid)PsychologyCognitive psychologyPsychology & Neuroscience
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Research ethics in planning: a framework for discussion

2008

This article discusses research into planning, and specifically how we might best frame the ethical issues which arise in, and through, such research. One of its central contentions is that ethical sensitivity is developed by researchers as part of a social practice, that is, through communal activity of a particular kind. Therefore, important as it is to ensure that researchers are aware of their personal ethical responsibilities, understanding what the moral point of view requires — that is, being sensitive to ethical issues, especially in new circumstances — is something which researchers acquire through involvement in appropriately conducted social practices. The article's suggestion i…

Research ethicsEthical issuesNormative ethicsGeography Planning and DevelopmentSociologyEpistemology
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