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1.
IEEE Pulse ; 8(1): 38-43, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28129141

RESUMEN

Elite-level athletes and professional sports teams are continually searching for opportunities to improve athletic performance and gain a competitive advantage on the field. Advances in technology have provided new avenues to maximize player health and safety. Over the last decade, time?motion analysis systems, such as video recording and computer digitization, have been used to measure human locomotion and improve sports performance. While these techniques were state of the art at the time, their usefulness is inhibited by the questionable validity of the acquired data, the labor-intensive nature of collecting data with manual hand-notation techniques, and their inability to track athlete position, movement, displacement, and velocity.


Asunto(s)
Atletas , Rendimiento Atlético/fisiología , Vestuario , Monitores de Ejercicio , Sistemas de Información Geográfica/instrumentación , Monitoreo Ambulatorio/instrumentación , Humanos
2.
Mil Med ; 178(7): 746-52, 2013 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23820348

RESUMEN

Information access at the point of care presents a different set of requirements than those for traditional search engines. Critical care in remote (e.g., battle field) and rural settings not only requires access to clinical guidelines and medical libraries with surgical precision but also with minimal user effort and time. Our development of a graphical, anatomy-driven navigator called Visual Navigator for Surgical Information Access (VINSIA) fulfills the goal for providing evidence-based clinical decision support, specifically in perioperative and critical care settings, to allow rapid and precise information access through a portable stand-alone system. It comes with a set of unique characteristics: (a) a high precision, interactive visual interface driven by human anatomy; (b) direct linkage of anatomical structures to associated content such as clinical guidelines, literature, and medical libraries; and (c) an administrative content management interface allowing only an accredited, expert-level curator to edit and update the clinical content to ensure accuracy and currency. We believe that the deployment of VINSIA will improve quality, safety, and evidence-based standardization of patient care.


Asunto(s)
Sistemas de Apoyo a Decisiones Clínicas , Interfaz Usuario-Computador , Acceso a la Información , Anatomía , Medicina Basada en la Evidencia , Humanos , Sistemas de Atención de Punto , Guías de Práctica Clínica como Asunto
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