Results 291 to 300 of about 288,773 (348)
Advances in IoT, AI, and Sensor-Based Technologies for Disease Treatment, Health Promotion, Successful Ageing, and Ageing Well. [PDF]
Qian Y, Siau KL.
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The compassion illusion: Can artificial empathy ever be emotionally authentic? [PDF]
K G A, Joseph J.
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Editorial: Wearables for human-robot interaction and collaboration. [PDF]
Zhang X +4 more
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The nature of quantum parallel processing and its implications for coding in brain neural networks: a novel computational mechanism. [PDF]
Johnson AS, Winlow W.
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Large-scale analogue quantum simulation using atom dot arrays. [PDF]
Donnelly MB +17 more
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Wearable Devices and New Frontiers in Smart Health Monitoring. [PDF]
Holgado-Terriza JA +2 more
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International Journal of Technoethics, 2010
In this article, the authors investigate, from an interdisciplinary perspective, possible ethical implications of the presence of ubiquitous computing systems in human perception/action. The term ubiquitous computing is used to characterize information-processing capacity from computers that are available everywhere and all the time, integrated into ...
Gonzalez, José Artur Quilici +3 more
openaire +3 more sources
In this article, the authors investigate, from an interdisciplinary perspective, possible ethical implications of the presence of ubiquitous computing systems in human perception/action. The term ubiquitous computing is used to characterize information-processing capacity from computers that are available everywhere and all the time, integrated into ...
Gonzalez, José Artur Quilici +3 more
openaire +3 more sources
Social Science Computer Review, 2008
The notion of ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) has important implications for health care. Ubicomp scenarios involving the rapid communication of information between interested parties assume that health consumers will be willing to place their trust in agents rather than physicians, but are these assumptions reasonable?
Elizabeth Sillence, Pam Briggs
openaire +2 more sources
The notion of ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) has important implications for health care. Ubicomp scenarios involving the rapid communication of information between interested parties assume that health consumers will be willing to place their trust in agents rather than physicians, but are these assumptions reasonable?
Elizabeth Sillence, Pam Briggs
openaire +2 more sources

