Search results for "Netzwerk"
showing 4 items of 4 documents
Translation Process Research as Interaction Research: From Mental to Socio-Cognitive Processes
2014
The main methodological approaches used in cognitive translation process research have hitherto been inspired by methods originally developed in the behavioural sciences, especially psychology. This article contends that mainstream experimental research in laboratory settings needs to be complemented with other methodological approaches such as qualitative, ethnographic research in order to be able to account for the situated, embedded and extended aspects of cognition – as described in current cognitive science approaches. In addition, it presents the empirical research design and initial results of an ethnographic field study into the socio-cognitive aspects of translation. The results sh…
Ambulante Therapie & Telemonitoring von Patienten mit Parkinson
2011
Körpernahe Sensornetzwerke können schon heute zur Steigerung der Lebensqualität beitragen, indem der Patient sein gewohntes Umfeld nicht zwingend verlassen muss. Der natürliche und nächste Schritt zur Verbesserung dieser wertvollen Diagnosesysteme beruht auf die Einbeziehung körpernaher Aktuatoren, welche auch eine gleichzeitige Therapierung erlauben. Durch einen interdisziplinären Ansatz, der klinische und technologische Erkenntnisse vereint, entsteht ein Sen-sor- und Aktuatornetzwerk, das am Beispiel eines sich in Entwicklung befindlichen innovativen Systems zur Behandlung von Parkinson vorgestellt wird.
Epistemic network analyses of economics students' graph understanding. An eye-tracking study
2020
Learning to solve graph tasks is one of the key prerequisites of acquiring domain-specific knowledge in most study domains. Analyses of graph understanding often use eye-tracking and focus on analyzing how much time students spend gazing at particular areas of a graph&mdash
Participation in Social Media: Studying Explicit and Implicit Forms of Participation in Communicative Social Networks
2016
The diverse forms of participation in social media raise many methodological and ethical issues that should be acknowledged in research. In this paper, participation in social media is studied by utilising the framework of explicit and implicit participation. The focus is on the communicative and communal aspects of social media. The aim of the paper is to promote the reconsideration of what constitutes participation when online users create connections rather than content. The underlying argument is that research on social media and the development of methods should concentrate more on implicit forms of participation.