digital paper
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

43
(FIVE YEARS 7)

H-INDEX

4
(FIVE YEARS 1)

2022 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 273
Author(s):  
Zahrotul Munawwaroh

Perkembangan teknologi komunikasi membawa perubahan pada industri media, ditambah dengan adanya pandemi covid-19 yang membuat media terpaksa harus membatasi ruang gerak karena adanya aturan baru. Industri media harus merumuskan ulang strategi di masa pandemi dan memaksimalkan saluran digital. Paper ini berupaya untuk mengkaji strategi digitalisasi yang dilakukan oleh PT Visi Media Asia Tbk atau VIVA selama masa pandemi covid-19 di tahun 2020. VIVA mengimplementasikan empat strategi digital untuk perusahaannya: peluncuran online sites, video on demand, dan aplikasi, serta pemanfaatan media sosial. VIVA juga melakukan integrasi saluran televisi ke website, serta perumusan ulang daypart slot di TV FTA Channelsnya. Strategi digital ini memberi beberapa perubahan dan implikasi terhadap viabilitas industri media VIVA yang dikaji melalui performa finansialnya.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dániel Görög ◽  
Mátyás Rényi

The presentation is an overview of the Mikes Kelemen Program - running since 2013 under the auspices of various public entities including the National Széchényi Library - in terms of its processes, results and future potential. Since its launch the Program has processed and offered into public use 250,000 documents collected from eight countries on four continents. The 90,000 documents so far placed offer us insight into the document needs of the domestic library system and those of Hungarian minorities abroad. After two years of development the initial HTML-based service interface listing the documents on offer was replaced by a new SQL database-based one in 2020. The implementation was driven by knowledge gained in the first years of the Program, including document processing experience, utilization statistics for the documents on offer, and feedback from partner institutions that joined the Program. The operation of the new database-based interface implements the management of duplicates exchange differently from the Hungarian practice. The Mikes Kelemen Program website is characterized by serviceoriented operation and integrated processing and recommendation process management. The operation enables accurate, reliable, automated and trackable document management, which may provide a blueprint for the overhaul of the national duplicates exchange system, replacing “digital paper-based” records such as Excel or Word.


Author(s):  
Dietrich von Seggern ◽  
Klaas Posselt ◽  
Tamir Hassan ◽  
Thomas Zellmann
Keyword(s):  

10.2196/13516 ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (8) ◽  
pp. e13516
Author(s):  
Kai Kehe ◽  
Roland Girgensohn ◽  
Walter Swoboda ◽  
Dan Bieler ◽  
Axel Franke ◽  
...  

Background The Syria crisis has forced more than 4 million people to leave their homeland. As a result, in 2016, an overwhelming number of refugees reached Germany. In response to this, it was of utmost importance to set up refugee camps and to provide humanitarian aid, but a health surveillance system was also implemented in order to obtain rapid information about emerging diseases. Objective The present study describes the effects of using digital paper and pen (DPP) technology on the speed, sequence, and behavior of epidemiological documentation in a refugee camp. Methods DPP technology was used to examine documentation speed, sequence, and behavior. The data log of the digital pens used to fill in the documentation was analyzed, and each pen stroke in a field was recorded using a timestamp. Documentation time was the difference between first and last stroke on the paper, which includes clinical examination and translation. Results For three months, 495 data sets were recorded. After corrections had been made, 421 data sets were considered valid and subjected to further analysis. The median documentation time was 41:41 min (interquartile range 29:54 min; mean 45:02 min; SD 22:28 min). The documentation of vital signs ended up having the strongest effect on the overall time of documentation. Furthermore, filling in the free-text field clinical findings or therapy or measures required the most time (mean 16:49 min; SD 20:32 min). Analysis of the documentation sequence revealed that the final step of coding the diagnosis was a time-consuming step that took place once the form had been completed. Conclusions We concluded that medical documentation using DPP technology leads to both an increase in documentation speed and data quality through the compliance of the data recorders who regard the tool to be convenient in everyday routine. Further analysis of more data sets will allow optimization of the documentation form used. Thus, DPP technology is an effective tool for the medical documentation process in refugee camps.


Author(s):  
Catherine Gough-Brady

In 2015 Ross Gibson wrote about the need in the academy for “linguistic explication” of the artwork and creative process, in particular to encourage debate on knowledge that arises from the work. I began my creative practice PhD after spending twenty years as a successful documentary practitioner. When it was time to start writing about my research and the new knowledge, instead of using text I turned to the audiovisual medium as my method of communication. I created “Filming” (2017), which combines the theory-rich mode of academic papers with the audio-visual form of my art, documentary. I called it a “digital paper”. The digital paper form has become an integral part of my PhD. This hybrid creative practice uses my artform medium as my method of communicating Gibson’s “linguistic explication”, rather than using text alone. This report will locate the digital paper within my PhD practice.


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (s1) ◽  
pp. s88-s88
Author(s):  
Paula Grainger

Introduction:Tracking patients through health systems is fundamental to coordinated care provision. However, it is an inconsistent element of emergency preparedness. This presentation presents findings of a study undertaken after the 2011 Christchurch Earthquake, and the resultant nationally implemented changes.Aim:The intent was to investigate options to improve patient tracking in a mass casualty event. By looking at one scenario involving a mass casualty presentation with the central responder disabled by electricity loss, standards of practice were outlined and made scalable to meet the needs of various events.Methods:Clinical and clerical staff involved in the event’s patient tracking were interviewed. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis and reported using the structure, process, and outcomes framework.1Results:Structures were material and human resources. Material resources were identification number systems, technological requirements, disaster-specific documents, minimum data for entry, digital/paper/hybrid registration systems, and digital-paper integration. Human resources were role allocation, and familiarity of plans, roles, processes, tools, and facilities. Process identified the activities to manage unidentified patients, triage, registration, and ongoing tracking processes. Outcomes were management of patient flow, patient-care provision, and patient-family reunification.Initial implementation was local. Structures and processes were agreed upon, with varying response levels according to the incident scope, while staying as close to business as usual for familiarity. National implementation followed via a Ministry of Health working group involving different district health boards. The group developed a consensus on the minimum data to be entered and the process to merge patient identities of initially unidentified patients. Written tools were shared for standardization.Discussion:With inter-agency and inter-organization emergency response, standardized processes and information are required. Collaboration prior to events can mitigate issues when an event occurs.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Kehe ◽  
Roland Girgensohn ◽  
Walter Swoboda ◽  
Dan Bieler ◽  
Axel Franke ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND The Syria crisis has forced more than 4 million people to leave their homeland. As a result, in 2016, an overwhelming number of refugees reached Germany. In response to this, it was of utmost importance to set up refugee camps and to provide humanitarian aid, but a health surveillance system was also implemented in order to obtain rapid information about emerging diseases. OBJECTIVE The present study describes the effects of using digital paper and pen (DPP) technology on the speed, sequence, and behavior of epidemiological documentation in a refugee camp. METHODS DPP technology was used to examine documentation speed, sequence, and behavior. The data log of the digital pens used to fill in the documentation was analyzed, and each pen stroke in a field was recorded using a timestamp. Documentation time was the difference between first and last stroke on the paper, which includes clinical examination and translation. RESULTS For three months, 495 data sets were recorded. After corrections had been made, 421 data sets were considered valid and subjected to further analysis. The median documentation time was 41:41 min (interquartile range 29:54 min; mean 45:02 min; SD 22:28 min). The documentation of vital signs ended up having the strongest effect on the overall time of documentation. Furthermore, filling in the free-text field clinical findings or therapy or measures required the most time (mean 16:49 min; SD 20:32 min). Analysis of the documentation sequence revealed that the final step of coding the diagnosis was a time-consuming step that took place once the form had been completed. CONCLUSIONS We concluded that medical documentation using DPP technology leads to both an increase in documentation speed and data quality through the compliance of the data recorders who regard the tool to be convenient in everyday routine. Further analysis of more data sets will allow optimization of the documentation form used. Thus, DPP technology is an effective tool for the medical documentation process in refugee camps.


2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 86-97
Author(s):  
Xiaoqiu Le ◽  
Chenyu Mao ◽  
Yuanbiao He ◽  
Changlei Fu ◽  
Liyuan Xu

AbstractPurposeTo develop a structured, rich media digital paper authoring tool with an object-based model that enables interactive, playable, and convertible functions.Design/methodology/approachWe propose Dpaper to organize the content (text, data, rich media, etc.) of dissertation papers as XML and HTML5 files by means of digital objects and digital templates.FindingsDpaper provides a structured-paper editorial platform for the authors of PhDs to organize research materials and to generate various digital paper objects that are playable and reusable. The PhD papers are represented as Web pages and structured XML files, which are marked with semantic tags.Research limitationsThe proposed tool only provides access to a limited number of digital objects. For instance, the tool cannot create equations and graphs, and typesetting is not yet flexible compared to MS Word.Practical implicationsThe Dpaper tool is designed to break through the patterns of unstructured content organization of traditional papers, and makes the paper accessible for not only reading but for exploitation as data, where the document can be extractable and reusable. As a result, Dpaper can make the digital publishing of dissertation texts more flexible and efficient, and their data more assessable.Originality/valueThe Dpaper tool solves the challenge of making a paper structured and object-based in the stage of authoring, and has practical values for semantic publishing.


2016 ◽  
Vol 100-101 ◽  
pp. 234-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matti Schneider ◽  
Matthias Kabel ◽  
Heiko Andrä ◽  
Alexander Lenske ◽  
Marek Hauptmann ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document