Supporting communication in rehabilitation engineering teams

被引:1
|
作者
Logan, GD
Radcliffe, DF
机构
[1] Royal Brisbane Hosp, Rehabil Engn Ctr, Brisbane, Qld 4029, Australia
[2] Univ Queensland, Dept Mech Engn, St Lucia, Qld 4067, Australia
来源
TELEMEDICINE JOURNAL | 2000年 / 6卷 / 02期
关键词
D O I
10.1089/107830200415162
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
The objectives of this project were to examine how members of a colocated rehabilitation engineering(a) team communicate during their work and hence deduce the implications of these communications for the design of video-based technologies to support communication among members of a virtual rehabilitation engineering team. Twenty-four assessment clinic sessions conducted by rehabilitation engineering team were recorded on videotape over a period of 3 years. These tapes were analyzed in considerable detail using a schema to identify and classify the talk and actions of the team members. Combining talk and actions with artifacts(b) is a mechanism used by designers to develop ideas and communicate them to others. Speakers rely on actions to support and make their talk lucid. Cooperation based on sharing artifacts is a strength of face-to-face interaction. Participants can experience artifacts and observe others using the artifacts. Tools such as videoconferencing to support virtual rehabilitation teams will have to provide the participants with the ability to see often quite subtle gestures and actions if they are to grasp the meaning of the talk. Increased understanding how a team communicates visually complex data may (1) aid development of next generation videoconferencing equipment to better support distributed designers and rehabilitation engineers and (2) guide development of techniques to enhance the quality of visual data presentation in current videoconferencing systems.
引用
收藏
页码:225 / 236
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Supporting globally distributed engineering design teams with communication technologies
    Maitland, C
    Steinfield, C
    Jang, CY
    [J]. GLOBAL NETWORKING '97 - 21ST CENTURY COMMUNICATIONS NETWORKS, VOL 2: POLICY; SOCIAL APPLICATIONS, 1997, : 338 - 346
  • [2] NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION IN ENGINEERING TEAMS
    DALTON, M
    DALTON, C
    [J]. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING, 1975, 97 (12): : 12 - 17
  • [3] Supporting collaboration in distributed software engineering teams
    Layzell, P
    Brereton, OP
    French, A
    [J]. SEVENTH ASIA-PACIFIC SOFTWARE ENGINEERING CONFERENCE, PROCEEDINGS, 2000, : 38 - 45
  • [4] NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION IN ENGINEERING TEAMS.
    Dalton, Marie
    Dalton, Charles
    [J]. 1600, (97):
  • [5] Communication in interprofessional rehabilitation teams: a scoping review
    Paxino, Julia
    Denniston, Charlotte
    Woodward-Kron, Robyn
    Molloy, Elizabeth
    [J]. DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION, 2022, 44 (13) : 3253 - 3269
  • [6] Supporting collaborative problem solving in engineering design teams
    Schaffer, Scott P.
    Lei, Kinifong
    [J]. 36TH ANNUAL FRONTIERS IN EDUCATION, CONFERENCE PROGRAM, VOLS 1-4: BORDERS: INTERNATIONAL, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL, 2006, : 1636 - +
  • [7] Supporting A Flexible Grouping Mechanism for Collaborating Engineering Teams
    Kanakis, Georgios
    Fischer, Stefan
    Khelladi, Djamel Eddine
    Egyed, Alexander
    [J]. 2019 ACM/IEEE 14TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GLOBAL SOFTWARE ENGINEERING (ICGSE 2019), 2019, : 129 - 138
  • [8] Using SBAR to improve communication in interprofessional rehabilitation teams
    Boaro, Nancy
    Fancott, Carol
    Baker, Ross
    Velji, Karima
    Andreoli, Angie
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INTERPROFESSIONAL CARE, 2010, 24 (01) : 111 - 114
  • [9] STRATEGY FOR SUPPORTING ORGANIZATION AND STRUCTURING OF DEVELOPMENT TEAMS IN CONCURRENT ENGINEERING
    ADACHI, T
    SHIH, LC
    ENKAWA, T
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN FACTORS IN MANUFACTURING, 1994, 4 (02): : 101 - 120
  • [10] INVESTIGATING VIRTUAL TEAMS: PATTERNS OF COMMUNICATION AND COLLABORATION IN SOFTWARE ENGINEERING LEARNING TEAMS
    Dafoulas, Georgios
    [J]. ICERI2014: 7TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF EDUCATION, RESEARCH AND INNOVATION, 2014, : 2803 - 2811