Results 271 to 280 of about 37,961 (305)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Journal of Medical Ethics, 2013
I agree with Dr Eyal that the ‘trust-promotion argument for informed consent’ fails to account for common sense intuitions about informed consent.1 Appealing to ‘social trust, especially trust in caretakers and medical institutions’ cannot, by itself, justify informed consent requirements. And stipulating, in the trust-promoting argument's first clause,
openaire +2 more sources
I agree with Dr Eyal that the ‘trust-promotion argument for informed consent’ fails to account for common sense intuitions about informed consent.1 Appealing to ‘social trust, especially trust in caretakers and medical institutions’ cannot, by itself, justify informed consent requirements. And stipulating, in the trust-promoting argument's first clause,
openaire +2 more sources
IEEE Security & Privacy, 2014
Do you believe the software packages you buy and install are secure? Today that belief is largely a matter of faith. Could a third-party verification process, whether similar to Underwriters Laboratories or the US Food and Drug Administration, give us greater assurance of secure software?
openaire +1 more source
Do you believe the software packages you buy and install are secure? Today that belief is largely a matter of faith. Could a third-party verification process, whether similar to Underwriters Laboratories or the US Food and Drug Administration, give us greater assurance of secure software?
openaire +1 more source
New England Journal of Medicine, 2005
Dr. Eric Topol asks, How can a drug that is associated with higher rates of both renal dysfunction and death than placebo — and that costs 50 times as much as standard therapies — be given to more than 600,000 patients and be promoted throughout the United States for serial outpatient use, an indication not listed on the label?
openaire +2 more sources
Dr. Eric Topol asks, How can a drug that is associated with higher rates of both renal dysfunction and death than placebo — and that costs 50 times as much as standard therapies — be given to more than 600,000 patients and be promoted throughout the United States for serial outpatient use, an indication not listed on the label?
openaire +2 more sources
On Verifying Hypotheses by Verifying Their Implicates
The American Journal of Psychology, 1954openaire +2 more sources
Blockchain-based verifiable privacy-preserving data classification protocol for medical data
Computer Standards and Interfaces, 2022Yanqi Zhao, Huilin Li, Ruonan Chen
exaly
1990
The concept of Design for Verifiability is introduced as a means of attacking the complexity problem encountered when verifying the correctness of hardware designs using mathematical proof techniques. The inherent complexity of systems implemented as integrated circuits results in a comparable descriptive complexity when modelling them in any framework
openaire +1 more source
The concept of Design for Verifiability is introduced as a means of attacking the complexity problem encountered when verifying the correctness of hardware designs using mathematical proof techniques. The inherent complexity of systems implemented as integrated circuits results in a comparable descriptive complexity when modelling them in any framework
openaire +1 more source
SVeriFL: Successive verifiable federated learning with privacy-preserving
Information Sciences, 2023Ningxin He, Tiegang Gao
exaly
Fair payments for verifiable cloud services using smart contracts
Computers and Security, 2020Mallikarjun Reddy Dorsala
exaly

