CORDIS fournit des liens vers les livrables publics et les publications des projets HORIZON.
Les liens vers les livrables et les publications des projets du 7e PC, ainsi que les liens vers certains types de résultats spécifiques tels que les jeux de données et les logiciels, sont récupérés dynamiquement sur OpenAIRE .
Livrables
This deliverable contains the following information Identification of everyday practices that facilitate constant good health conditions in the Intrinsic capacity domains In order to address health promotion potential practices will be identified in everyday life of older adults by indepth interviews and participant observations Practices could range from strolling workouts to healthy nutrition However these practices could differ from objective and profound knowledge about health promotionIdentification of concrete health promotion activities from a medical ie objective perspective Health promotion activities from a rather medical perspective represent a normative source to design persuasive and transformational interventions However these activities often differ from everyday practices In order to identify these activities expert and enduser interviews will be conducted Identification of interventions and strategies to engage older adults in health promotion activities Interventions embody both knowledge about everyday practices what older adults already do and objective health promotion knowledge what physicians think they should do A list of both will be the starting point to design health promotion interventions ie technologyWithin this deliverable the health professionals involved in each pilot site will cooperate to design the contents of the coaching based on the state of the art in the field of Intrinsic Capacity IC The coaching contents will be aimed at promoting sustaining or maintaining wellbeing optimal quality of life and healthy lifestyles in older adults in order to strengthen the IC of the older population and so counteracting the decline or losses due to advancing ageing processes The coaching activities provided by the eVITA Coach will be focused on a Personalized data collection and case analyses with the aim of identifying specific health problems unhealthy lifestyles and impairments in wellbeing b Individualized coach to improve wellbeing and quality of life by appropriate interventions and behavioral assignments Under the supervision of health professionals the eVITA coach will suggest specific activities to each participant ie walking moderate physical activity or keeping a diary with the identification of positive emotions or positive memories from the past these two activities are directly related to wellbeing promotion and it will monitor the course of the intervention For instance the virtual coach will assist older adults in planning their daily activities and homework prescriptions It will also ask for feedback or obstacles encountered by older adults and in case of need may require specific help by professionals
Report on the final conference (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)Deliverable D9.15, relative to Task 9.7, will report on the organization of the final conference in France at M36. The final conference will be organised in Paris (by IMT) to disseminate the project final results and to support its sustainability beyond the project lifespan in Europe and Japan. It will be also written according to the format of a Conference proceedings.
e-VITA platform architecture - final version (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)This deliverable includes the final version of the functional architecture of the e-VITA platform.The deliverable contains an update of the initial architecture including results and feedback of the first iteration of the evaluation studies.
Update on everyday practices that support subjective wellbeing (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)This deliverable contains an update of the following information, that has already been adressed in D3.1:•In depth interviews and participant observations with older adults in Europe and Japan (by preference together with participants that will be included in WP6). Interviews will focus on existing everyday practices that already increase subjective wellbeing. Therefore, the screening of potential participants should focus on older adults that already lead a meaningful and positive life.•Identifying existing everyday practices that are likely to increase subjective wellbeing. Based on the interviews and participant observations practices that are likely to increase subjective wellbeing will be identified. These practices will be specific and coherent behaviors that older adults perform.•Identifying implicit information on user practices by using Design Fiction, Techno Mimesis and experimental vignette method to conduct findings that explicit methods cannot reveal. Based on the findings the design of usage scenarios will be more specific and less vulnerable to failure in the proof of concept.
Report on Stakeholder Training Activities (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)Deliverable D9.10, relative to Task 9.5, will be concerned with a Stakeholder training to be done at all study sites in Europe and Japan in order to implement the smart living and coaching system in daily routines and to train all involved stakeholders in how to interact and use the provided support of the combined solutions for their own purpose.
Formal agreement of local authorities in the three countries for testing wave 2 (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)Official agreements from each country's ethical review board
First Socio-economic survey and Stakeholder analysis report (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)Deliverable D98 relative to Task 95 will conduct a stakeholder analysis to be performed in EU member states and Japan in order to get an overall picture in those countries other specificities of each society and culture with regard to ageing This includes exchange programs of students developers and scientists between the partners in Europe and Japan This deliverable will provide a first version on this survey at M09
Interoperability and standards guidelines for EU/Japan (Final Version) (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)In this deliverable, devices, protocols, communication technologies and data models involved for the use cases of the project will be analyzed. Furthermore, in this document international standards, initiatives and tools will be described to set the final standards and interoperability guidelines for the project, and also for external vendors in Europe and Japan.Final version of standards and interoperability guidelines.
Proof of Concept evaluation reports (wave 2) (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)This report will contain quantitative and qualitative analyses (namely user observation, user testing, interviews, focus groups) triangulated in order to assess the usefulness and effectiveness of the system in reinforcing physical, cognitive, mental and social wellbeing as well as in enhancing self-care. Variables will be measured at pre-intervention (MT+0) and post-intervention (MT+6) times. In addition, focus groups with various secondary stakeholders will be reported.
Final study protocol (proof of concept), wave 2 (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)Update of D8.1
Final Socio-economic survey and Stakeholder analysis report (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)Deliverable D9.9, relative to Task 9.5, will be the up-dated and final version of deliverable D9.8 on the stakeholder analysis previously performed in EU member states and Japan.
Sensing technologies to monitor behaviors, emotions and physiological parameters (Final Version) (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)Final version of sensing technologies to monitor behaviors, emotions and physiological parameters. In particular, in this document sensing systems to measure user's behaviours, emotions and physiological parameters will be presented. Furthermore, flexibility and interoperability of the sensors will be investigated.
Update on gender specific practices and cultural aspects (including ageing policies) based on output of WP6 (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)This deliverable contains an update on D3.3. It contains the following points:•Identification of gender/and or cultural specific issues related to older adults in Europe and Japan. The underlying psychological mechanisms to create subjective wellbeing are rather independent of gender and culture. However, we will conduct expert and end-user interviews to better understand what contributes to the wellbeing of older adults. The results of the interviews will contribute to the e-VITA design to support older adults in their daily activities in Europe and Japan. •Specific everyday practices to facilitate subjective wellbeing differ very much between Europe and Japan. In order to identify these differences, expert interviews and a literature review will be conducted throughout our exploration field. Practices that are beneficial for older adults, wellbeing and health promotion identified in task 3.1 - 3.2 will be reviewed based on cultural demands and differences in Europe and Japan. Thus, the cultural background of older adults will be taken into account to identify differences but also similarities that will be essential for our system design. •A next step (D3.8) will be to compare the results of the interviews on what contributes to the wellbeing of older adults. AGE and JS will investigate whether age-friendly environment policies (WHO, 2007) have an impact or are contributing to the implementation of these identified everyday practices at the local level of the e-VITA pilot sites. The comparison of what works or not will be shared between the European and Japanese partners with the objective of facilitating these daily activities from a policy perspective. The analysis of age-friendly environment policies will also support T9.1. •Selection of customized contents and interface, given the cultural profile. The contents will feature a variety of topics that are of interest to the user, to establish a common ground and ensure a long-term engagement with the virtual coach. Typical contents are stories from the local folklore, local history, religion and spirituality, wellbeing, and cooking recipes.
Final report on WP3 (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)This deliverable represents an overview over all the activities that have happend in WP3.
Final report of the scientific dissemination activities (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)Deliverable D9.5, relative to Task 9.6, will establish the final plan w.r.t. the previous deliverables D9.1 and D9.4 concerning the scientific dissemination plans and actions performed within the two Consortia in Europe and Japan. It will present the same contents as D9.4 but with final up-dates.
Final Project Report (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)The final report of the project will be prepared at the end of the project and submitted within 60 days. It will consist of i) a technical final report, concerning the overview of results and their exploitation and dissemination, a summary for publication, conclusions and socioeconomic impact, and ii) a final financial report concerning a final financial statement.
Updates of the End-Users and Stakeholder Requirements (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)The deliverbale will provide the socio-technical Living Lab infrastructure to support end users and stakeholders in co-creation, exploration, experimentation and evaluation of innovative ideas, scenarios, concepts and related technological artefacts. While the main user requirements will be provided by WP2 (deliverable 2.1), the Living Lab infrastructures offer the possibility to constantly and iteratively ‘update’ these requirements via comparisons across different settings (also taking into account different factors such as age, habits, values and daily routines). Mainly qualitative empirical methods (interviews, observations, cultural probes, creative workshops and self-documentation techniques like diaries) will be used to gather information about the users: The deliverable will start with a set of semi-structured interviews with end-users and health care professionals/informal carers as well as other stakeholders (e.g. technology developers and service providers from Europe and Japan). It will follow with a series of participant observations to collect situated data on how patients and carers interact and how the health conditions in question are managed. Participants will furthermore be invited to engage with cultural probes for a reflective and self-documentation experience. Documented data will then undergo a thematic analysis. A series of focus groups will furthermore be carried out to discuss shared sentiments. Additionally, we will also undertake a literature review, review of technological innovations and availability. Insights from these efforts will add to an understanding of facilitating factors for the introduction of AHA technologies in the project. These can be of technological (e.g. user centred design, infrastructures), social (e.g. acceptance of new technologies, change in relationship models), legal (e.g. privacy, security) and organisational (new roles and duties, reimbursement and funding) nature.
Report on the intermediate conference (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)Deliverable D9.14, relative to Task 9.7, will report on the organization of the intermediate conference in Japan at M18. The intermediate conference will be organized in Tokyo (by AIST) to disseminate the results from Living Labs and the small pilot. It will be written according to the format of a Conference proceedings.
Underlying data, i.e. data needed to validate the results of the evlauation study as presented in scientific publications, including the associated metadata (i.e. metadata describing the research data deposited) will be included here.This will include qualitative data from the living labds as well as quantitative data from the evaluatio study, in case that it complies with ethical regulations and GDPR. Also coordination and support actions may be included in this deliverables.
Final version of coaching devices for the different use cases will be identified. New software and hardware parts will be developed and analyzed to provide coaching systems tailored on the users.
Intercultural Long-term Living Lab Evaluation of AHA interventions I (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)First phase This deliverable concerns the system dashboard and configurators, which support control of the data information flows amongst all involved parties according to European and Japanese GDPR rules. From analysing state of the art privacy mechanisms in WP4, a core set of established components and technology (incl. trustworthy AI and Edge Computing) to be used in e-VITA will be defined and brought in line with the overall architecture of the AHA support system in WP7. Based on existing standards and norms for interoperability in Europe and Japan, models of identity and identification will be developed that allow consistent modifications reflecting adaption to users' and stakeholder mental models. We will further specify processes and algorithms for modification and interaction with trusted privacy modules of e-VITA. Within this deliverable a Privacy Dashboard will be designed for user privacy awareness, trust and control, following the premises of the user-centred design approach adopted for the project, which entails several design iterations with the participation of end-users, elaboration of low- and high- fidelity proto¬types and the performance of formative usability tests, so as to ensure that the resulting system will be useful and usable.
Intercultural Long-term Living Lab Evaluation of AHA interventions II (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)Second phaseThis deliverable concerns the system dashboard and configurators, which support control of the data information flows amongst all involved parties according to European and Japanese GDPR rules. From analysing state of the art privacy mechanisms in WP4, a core set of established components and technology (incl. trustworthy AI and Edge Computing) to be used in e-VITA will be defined and brought in line with the overall architecture of the AHA support system in WP7. Based on existing standards and norms for interoperability in Europe and Japan, models of identity and identification will be developed that allow consistent modifications reflecting adaption to users' and stakeholder mental models. We will further specify processes and algorithms for modification and interaction with trusted privacy modules of e-VITA. Within this deliverable a Privacy Dashboard will be designed for user privacy awareness, trust and control, following the premises of the user-centred design approach adopted for the project, which entails several design iterations with the participation of end-users, elaboration of low- and high- fidelity proto¬types and the performance of formative usability tests, so as to ensure that the resulting system will be useful and usable.
e-VITA API and technical guidelines for third party access (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)This deliverable includes the definition of guidelines and external APIs that will be exposed to third party partners to enable their access. The deliverable will also contain references to possible tools and frameworks in order to simplify and speed up the usage of the API.
This deliverable provides hight-fidelity Prototypes of the AHA Privacy Dashboard. The aim is to have a sophisticated version at the end of month 21.
Use cases configurator - Demonstrator (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)The use cases configurator will be developed at month 26 as a demonstrator. The use cases configurator identifies the optimal configuration of sensors and coaching systems avoiding redundancy in the measurements.Final version of the demonstrator.
Data Fusion, situation assessment, context caching and serving - Final (s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)The final tool for data fusion will be implemented. In particular, multimodal data fusion will be intelligently exploited by the Dialogue System module (DS) and its various sub-modules. The delivered tool will allow the DS system (cf. T5.5) to improve its understanding of the user’s requests performed by voice in different potential attitudes, contexts and emotional states. These modalities will be features extracted from speech, face expression and moods, gestures signals acquired by the specific sensors defined in T4.3. This deliverable will also define and specify the data interface as input and also output to/from the DS in a closed-loop way via the FIWARE stage.
Publications
Auteurs:
Kristiina Jokinen, Keiko Homma, Yoshio Matsumoto, Ken Fukuda
Publié dans:
JSAI 2021, Numéro 35, June 08, 2021 - June 11, 2021, 2021
Éditeur:
JSAI
DOI:
10.11517/pjsai.jsai2021.0_1n2is5a04
Auteurs:
Kristiina Jokinen
Publié dans:
Proceedings of the 14th International Workshop on Spoken Dialogue Systems Technology, 2024
Éditeur:
Springer conference proceedings
Auteurs:
Riccardo Naccarelli; Sara Casaccia; Michela Pirozzi; Gian Marco Revel
Publié dans:
Buildings 2022, Numéro 12(12):2213, 2022
Éditeur:
Buildings 2022
DOI:
10.3390/buildings12122213
Auteurs:
Felix Carros, Isabel Schwaninger, Adrian Preussner, Dave Randall, Rainer Wieching, Geraldine Fitzpatrick, and Volker Wulf
Publié dans:
2022 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI ’22), Numéro Article 631, 2022, Page(s) 1–15
Éditeur:
Association for Computing Machinery
DOI:
10.1145/3491102.3517435
Auteurs:
Sara Casaccia, Riccardo Naccarelli, Kristiina Jokinen, Gian Marco Revel
Publié dans:
2022 IEEE International Workshop on Metrology for Living Environment, MetroLivEn 2022, Numéro 25-27 May 2022, 2022, Page(s) pp 164-169, ISBN 978-1-6654-0893-6
Éditeur:
IEEE
DOI:
10.1109/metrolivenv54405.2022.9826905
Auteurs:
Kristiina Jokinen
Publié dans:
JSAI-2023 International Session Robots and real worlds, 2023
Éditeur:
JSAI
DOI:
10.11517/pjsai.jsai2023.0_3u5is403
Auteurs:
Felix Carros, Ryan Browne, Gabriele Trovato, Keiko Homma, Rainer Wieching
Publié dans:
ICSR 2022, Numéro First Online: 02 February 2023, 2022, Page(s) pp 574–586
Éditeur:
Springer conference proceedings
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-031-24670-8_51
Auteurs:
Ruben Albers, Marc Hassenzahl
Publié dans:
Proceedings of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '24) - May 2024, Numéro Article n° 529, 2024, Page(s) pp 1–14
Éditeur:
ACM Publishers
DOI:
10.1145/3613904.3642421
Auteurs:
Michael McTear, Kristiina Jokinen, Mohnish Dubey, Gérard Chollet, Jérôme Boudy, Christophe Lohr, Sonja Dana Roelen, Wanja Mössing, and Rainer Wieching
Publié dans:
Participative Urban Health and Healthy Aging in the Age of AI. ICOST 2022, Numéro LNCS 13287, 2022, Page(s) pp. 257–265, ISBN 978-3-031-09593-1
Éditeur:
Springer, Cham
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-031-09593-1_21
Auteurs:
Riccardo Naccarelli, Mossaab Hariz, Francesca D’Agresti, Sara Casaccia, Jerome Boudy, Gian Marco Revel
Publié dans:
2024 IEEE International Workshop on Metrology for Living Environment (MetroLivEnv), Numéro June 12-14th, 2024, Crete, published in July 2024, 2024
Éditeur:
IEEE
Auteurs:
Gabriele Trovato, Yueh-Hsuan Weng
Publié dans:
Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications, Volume 366 Social Robots in Social Institutions - Proceedings of Robophilosophy 2022, Numéro vol. 366, Social Robots in Social Institutions, 2022, Page(s) pp 267 - 275
Éditeur:
ACM Publishers
DOI:
10.3233/faia220626
Auteurs:
Keiko HOMMA, Yoshio MATSUMOTO
Publié dans:
ITAP 2022 (held as part of HCII2022), 2022
Éditeur:
Springer Link
Auteurs:
Gabriele Trovato, Yueh-Hsuan Weng, Yegang Du
Publié dans:
ICRA XRo, 2023
Éditeur:
ICRA
Auteurs:
Riccardo Naccarelli, Sara Casaccia, Keiko Homma, Roberta Bevilacqua, Gian Marco Revel
Publié dans:
2023 IEEE International Workshop on Metrology for Living Environment (MetroLivEnv), Numéro 29-31 May 2023, 2023, Page(s) pp 196-201, ISBN 978-1-6654-5693-7
Éditeur:
IEEE
DOI:
10.1109/metrolivenv56897.2023.10164067
Auteurs:
Shen et al.
Publié dans:
IEEE RO-MAN 2022, 2022
Éditeur:
IEEE
Auteurs:
Ryan BROWNE, Toshimi OGAWA, Julio VIZCARRA, *Kristiina JOKINEN
Publié dans:
Proceedings of the Annual Conference of JSAI, 2022 The 36th Annual Conference of the Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence, Numéro Volume JSAI2022, 36th (2022), Session ID 3S4-IS-4-04, 2022, Page(s) 3S4IS404
Éditeur:
J-STAGE
DOI:
10.11517/pjsai.jsai2022.0_3s4is404
Auteurs:
Florian Szczepaniak, Jérôme Boudy, Gérard Chollet, Mossaab Hariz, Christophe Lohr
Publié dans:
9ème Colloque sur la Télésanté : ”Dispositifs biomédicaux et technologies numériques en santé: des besoins aux usages” (JETSAN 2023), 2023
Éditeur:
HAL open science
Auteurs:
Yannis Tevissen, Dan Istrate, Vincent Zalc, Jerome Boudy, Gérard Chollet, Frédéric Petitpont
Publié dans:
9ème Colloque sur la Télésanté : ”Dispositifs biomédicaux et technologies numériques en santé: des besoins aux usages” (JETSAN 2023), 2023
Éditeur:
HAL open science
Auteurs:
Ruben Albers, Shadan Sadeghian, Matthias Laschke, Marc Hassenzahl
Publié dans:
CHI '23: Proceedings of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, Numéro No.302, April 2023, 2023, Page(s) pp 1–16, ISBN 9781450394215
Éditeur:
ACM Digital Library
DOI:
10.1145/3544548.3581199
Auteurs:
Florian Szczepaniak, Jerome Boudy, Gerard Chollet, Mossaab Hariz, Christophe Lohr
Publié dans:
PETRA '23: Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on PErvasive Technologies Related to Assistive Environments, Numéro July 5-7, 2023 Corfou, 2023, Page(s) pp 662–666
Éditeur:
ACM Digital Library
DOI:
10.1145/3594806.3596594
Auteurs:
Sarah Janböcke,Toshimi Ogawa, Johanna Langendorf, Koki Kobayashi, Ryan Browne, Rainer Wieching, Yasuyuki Taki
Publié dans:
Future Technologies Conference (FTC) 2022, Numéro Volume 13 Numéro 9, 2022, 2022
Éditeur:
SAI
DOI:
10.14569/ijacsa.2022.0130902
Auteurs:
Julio Vizcarra, Kristiina Jokinen
Publié dans:
HCII 2022, Numéro First Online: 24 May 2022, 2022, Page(s) pp. 122-133
Éditeur:
Springer conference proceedings
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-031-05654-3_8
Auteurs:
Gérard Chollet, Hugues Sansen, Yannis Tevissen, Jérôme Boudy, Mossaab Hariz, Christophe Lohr and Fathy Yassa
Publié dans:
11th INternational Conference on Human Interaction & Emerging Technologies : AI & Future Applications (IHIET-AI 2024), Numéro IHIET-AI proceedings, 2024
Éditeur:
AHFE Open Access
DOI:
10.48550/arxiv.2401.01146
Auteurs:
Keisuke Kokubun *, Toshimi Ogawa *, Ryan Browne, Takamitsu Shinada,Lorenz Granrath, Johanna Moeller, Nhu Tram, Rainer Wieching, Yasuyuki Taki
Publié dans:
Sustainability 2022, Numéro 14 - no. 7: 4148, 2022
Éditeur:
MDPI Journals
DOI:
10.3390/su14074148
Auteurs:
Bevilacqua R, Soraci L, Stara V, Riccardi GR, Corsonello A, Pelliccioni G, Lattanzio F, Casaccia S, Möller J, Wieching R, Ogawa T, Watanabe S, Kokobun K, Kondo I, Takano E and Maranesi E
Publié dans:
Frontiers in Medicine, Numéro 9:929261, 2022
Éditeur:
Frontiers in Medecine
DOI:
10.3389/fmed.2022.929261
Auteurs:
Vera Stara, Luca Soraci, Eiko Takano, Izumi Kondo, Johanna Möller, Elvira Maranesi, Riccardo Luzi, Giovanni Renato Riccardi, Ryan Browne, Sébastien Dacunha, Cecilia Palmier, Rainer Wieching, Toshimi Ogawa, Roberta Bevilacqua
Publié dans:
Jornal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR), Numéro J Med Internet Res 2023;25:e41035, 2023
Éditeur:
JMIR Publications
DOI:
10.2196/41035
Auteurs:
Riccardo Naccarelli, Francesca D’Agresti, Sonja Dana Roelen, Kristiina Jokinen, Sara Casaccia, Gian Marco Revel, Martino Maggio, Zohre Azimi, Mirza Mohtashim Alam, Qasid Saleem, Abrar Hyder Mohammed, Giulio Napolitano, Florian Szczepaniak, Mossaab Hariz, Gérard Chollet, Christophe Lohr, Jérôme Boudy, Rainer Wieching and Toshimi Ogawa
Publié dans:
Sensors 2024, Numéro Sensors 2024, 24(2), 638, 2024
Éditeur:
MDPI
DOI:
10.3390/s24020638
Auteurs:
Jasmin Lehmann, Lorenz Granrath, Ryan Browne, Toshimi Ogawa, Keisuke Kokobun, Yasuyuki Taki, Kristiina Jokinen, Sarah Janboecke, Christophe Lohr, Rainer Wieching, Roberta Bevilacqua, Sara Cassacia, Gian Marco Revel
Publié dans:
Sustainability, Numéro Sustainability 2024, 16(7), 3064, 2024
Éditeur:
MDPI
DOI:
10.3390/su16073064
Auteurs:
Vera Stara, Elvira Maranesi, Johanna Moller, Cecilia Palmier, Toshimi Ogawa, Ryan Browne, Marine Luc, Rainer Wieching, Jerome Boudy and Roberta Bevilacqua
Publié dans:
Healthcare 2024, Numéro Healthcare 2024, 12(3), 381, 2024
Éditeur:
Healthcare - MDPI
DOI:
10.3390/healthcare12030381
Auteurs:
Varghese Marokkie, Sheen ; McTear, Mike ; Bi, Y.
Publié dans:
Conversations 2022, 2022, Page(s) 1-7
Éditeur:
editor / Asbjørn Følstad
Auteurs:
Johanna Möller, Vera Stara *, Giulio Amabili, Federico Barbarossa, Giovanni Renato Riccardi, Clotilda Martella, Valentina Di Donna, Cecilia Palmier, Toshimi Ogawa, Marine Luc, Rainer Wieching, Elvira Maranesi *, Roberta Bevilacqua
Publié dans:
Healthcare 2024, Numéro Healthcare 2024, 12(2), 143, 2024
Éditeur:
MDPI
DOI:
10.3390/healthcare12020143
Auteurs:
Naccarelli R., Casaccia S., Revel G.M.
Publié dans:
Sensors 2022, Numéro Volume 22 no. 9: 3472, 2022
Éditeur:
MDPI
DOI:
10.3390/s22093472
Auteurs:
Bevilacqua Roberta , Stara Vera , Amabili Giulio , Margaritini Arianna , Benadduci Marco , Barbarossa Federico , Maranesi Elvira , Rigaud Anne-Sophie , Dacunha Sébastien , Palmier Cecilia , Moller Johanna , Browne Ryan , Ogawa Toshimi , Wieching Rainer
Publié dans:
Frontiers in Public Health, Numéro Volume 12 - 2024, 2024, ISSN 2296-2565
Éditeur:
Frontiers
DOI:
10.3389/fpubh.2024.1256734
Auteurs:
Isabel Schwaninger, Felix Carros, Astrid Weiss, Volker Wulf, Geraldine Fitzpatrick
Publié dans:
Universal Access in the Information Society, Numéro 2022, 2022
Éditeur:
Springer Nature
DOI:
10.1007/s10209-022-00901-y
Auteurs:
McTear, M.; Jokinen, K.; Alam, M.M.; Saleem, Q.; Napolitano, G.; Szczepaniak, F.; Hariz, M.; Chollet, G.; Lohr, C.; Boudy, J.; et al.
Publié dans:
Sensors 2023, Numéro no. 5: 2748., 2023
Éditeur:
MDPI Sensors
DOI:
10.3390/s23052748
Auteurs:
Philip Weber, Faisal Mahmood, Michael Ahmadi, Vanessa von Jan, Thomas Ludwig and Rainer Wieching
Publié dans:
ICOM Journal, Numéro i-com 2023; vol. 22 issue 1, 2023, Page(s) pp. 33–51, ISSN 2196-6826
Éditeur:
De Gruyter
DOI:
10.1515/icom-2022-0042
Auteurs:
Johanna Möller; Roberta Bevilacqua; Ryan Browne; Takamitsu Shinada; Sébastien Dacunha; Cecilia Palmier; Vera Stara; Elvira Maranesi; Arianna Margaritini; Eiko Takano; Izumi Kondo; Shuichiro Watanabe; Michael Ahmadi; Rainer Wieching; Toshimi Ogawa
Publié dans:
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Numéro 19(16):10341, 2022, ISSN 1660-4601
Éditeur:
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
DOI:
10.3390/ijerph191610341
Auteurs:
Sarah Janböcke, Toshimi Ogawa, Johanna Langendorf, Koki Kobayashi, Ryan Browne, Rainer Wieching and Yasuyuki Taki
Publié dans:
International Journal of Advanced Computer Science and Applications(IJACSA), Numéro 14(10), 2023, ISSN 2156-5570
Éditeur:
The Science and Information (SAI) Organization
DOI:
10.14569/IJACSA.2023.0141001
Auteurs:
Cécilia Palmier, Anne-Sophie Rigaud, Toshimi Ogawa, Rainer Wieching, Sébastien Dacunha, Federico Barbarossa, Vera Stara, Roberta Bevilacqua, Maribel Pino
Publié dans:
Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR), Numéro volume 26, June 2024, 2024, ISSN 1438-8871
Éditeur:
Journal of medical Internet Research
DOI:
10.2196/48126
Auteurs:
Yannis Tevissen
Publié dans:
IP Paris Doctoral School n°626, Numéro December 4th, 2023 - PhD defence at Institut Polytechnique de Paris, 2023
Éditeur:
Doctoral School of Institut Polytechnique de Paris
Auteurs:
Kristiina Jokinen, Keiko Homma, Yoshio Matsumoto, Ken Fukuda
Publié dans:
Springer Nature series Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, Numéro AISC,volume 1423, first Online: 26 February 2022, 2022, Page(s) pp 190–200
Éditeur:
Advances in Artificial Intelligence - Selected Papers from the Annual Conference of Japanese Society of Artificial Intelligence (JSAI 2021)
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-030-96451-1_17
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