Results 201 to 210 of about 63,676 (245)

Videoconferencing

Teaching Sociology, 2007
Institutional Context and Departmental Capstone Course This course was taught in a public, four year institution of 5,000 residential stu dents, two-thirds of whom are women. The institution is highly selective and over half of the entering students are in the top 10% of their graduating classes.
Marie-Noƫlle Lamy, Regine Hampel
openaire   +2 more sources

Videoconferencing

Interpreting. International Journal of Research and Practice in Interpreting, 1996
The technical aspects of videoconferencing are described, with emphasis on the H 320 standards for the transmission of compressed video and audio streams. The implications of multilingual videoconferencing for sound and image quality in conference interpreting and the related cognitive, medical and psychological problems are then discussed.
openaire   +1 more source

Misconceptions surrounding videoconferencing

Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare, 2005
We carried out a study to assess the level of training required by hospital staff to operate a videoconferencing system. Fifty members of hospital staff, who had no previous videoconferencing experience, were studied. When using simple pictorial instructions, they took on average just under 6 min to connect successfully to a remote site. Male subjects
K, Padgham   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Institutionally based videoconferencing

International Review of Psychiatry, 2015
The delivery of psychiatric care via video-teleconferencing (VTC) technology is thought to have reached a tipping point. As a medical speciality with relatively few material or technical requirements for service delivery, psychiatry has been one of the earliest to embrace the possibility of providing evaluations and treatment at a distance.
Robert Lee, Caudill, Zachary, Sager
openaire   +2 more sources

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