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1.
J Clin Med ; 12(5)2023 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36902727

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The ABL90 FLEX PLUS (Radiometer) is a blood gas analyzer that also provides creatinine (Cr) and blood urea nitrogen (BUN) results. We assessed the accuracy of the ABL90 FLEX PLUS to measure Cr and BUN and find suitable candidate specimens against primary specimens (heparinized whole-blood (H-WB)). METHODS: Paired H-WB, serum, and sodium-citrated whole-blood (C-WB) samples (105) were collected. The Cr and BUN levels in the H-WB using the ABL90 FLEX PLUS were compared with those of the serum using four automated chemistry analyzers. The suitability of the candidate specimens was assessed at each medical decision level according to the CLSI guideline EP35-ED1. RESULTS: The respective mean differences of the ABL90 FLEX PLUS for the Cr and BUN were below -0.10 and -3.51 mg/dL compared to the other analyzers. The systematic differences between the serum and the H-WB at the low, medium, and high medical decision levels were all 0% for Cr, but those of the C-WB were -12.96%, -11.81%, and -11.30%, respectively. Regarding imprecision, the SDserum/SDH-WB ratios at each level were 0.14, 1.41, and 0.68, whereas the SDC-WB/SDH-WB ratios were 0.35, 2.00, and 0.73, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The ABL90 FLEX PLUS provided Cr and BUN results comparable with the four widely used analyzers. Among the candidates, the serum was suitable for Cr testing using the ABL90 FLEX PLUS, while the C-WB did not satisfy the acceptance criteria.

3.
JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol ; 9(4): e39984, 2022 Dec 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36525296

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: A critical gap in our knowledge about social media is whether we can alleviate accessibility barriers and challenges for individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI), to improve their social participation and health. To do this, we need real-time information about these barriers and challenges, to design appropriate aids. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to characterize the ways people with TBI accessed and used social media websites and understand unique challenges they faced. METHODS: We invited 8 adults with moderate to severe TBI to log onto their own Facebook page and use it as they regularly would while thinking aloud. Their comments were recorded and transcribed for qualitative analysis. We first analyzed participants' utterances using a priori coding based on a framework proposed by Meshi et al to classify adults' motives for accessing social media. We next used an open coding method to understand the challenges that people with TBI faced while using Facebook. In other words, we analyzed participants' needs for using Facebook and then identified Facebook features that made it challenging for them to meet those needs. RESULTS: Participants used all categories of codes in the framework by Meshi et al and provided detailed feedback about the Facebook user interface. A priori coding revealed 2 dimensions that characterized participants' Facebook use: whether they were active or passive about posting and self-disclosure on Facebook and their familiarity and fluency in using Facebook. The open coding analysis revealed 6 types of challenges reported by participants with TBI, including difficulty with language production and interpretation, attention and information overload, perceptions of negativity and emotional contagion, insufficient guidance to use Facebook, concerns about web-based scams and frauds, and general accessibility concerns. CONCLUSIONS: Results showed that individuals with TBI used Facebook for the same reasons typical adults do, suggesting that it can help increase social communication and reduce isolation and loneliness. Participants also identified barriers, and we propose modifications that could improve access for individuals with brain injury. On the basis of identified functions and challenges, we conclude by proposing design ideas for social media support tools that can promote more active use of social media sites by adults with TBI.

4.
Front Digit Health ; 4: 991814, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36606124

ABSTRACT

Background: Adults with traumatic brain injury (TBI) report significant barriers to using current social media platforms, including cognitive overload and challenges in interpreting social cues. Rehabilitation providers may be tasked with helping to address these barriers. Objectives: To develop technological supports to increase social media accessibility for people with TBI-related cognitive impairments and to obtain preliminary data on the perceived acceptability, ease of use, and utility of proposed technology aids. Methods: We identified four major barriers to social media use among individuals with TBI: sensory overload, memory impairments, misreading of social cues, and a lack of confidence to actively engage on social media platforms. We describe the process of developing prototypes of support aids aimed at reducing these specific social media barriers. We created mock-ups of these prototypes and asked 46 community-dwelling adults with TBI (24 females) to rate the proposed aids in terms of their acceptability, ease of use, and utility. Results: Across all aids, nearly one-third of respondents agreed they would use the proposed aids frequently, and the majority of respondents rated the proposed aids as easy to use. Respondents indicated that they would be more likely to use the memory and post-writing aids than the attention and social cue interpretation aids. Conclusions: Findings provide initial support for social-media-specific technology aids to support social media access and social participation for adults with TBI. Results from this study have design implications for future development of evidence-based social media support aids. Future work should develop and deploy such aids and investigate user experience.

5.
Cyberpsychol Behav Soc Netw ; 20(10): 610-614, 2017 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29039698

ABSTRACT

Selfies are everywhere on social media. Research has focused only on who is posting selfies and has not addressed the audience members viewing selfies. This study aims to fill this gap by analyzing the judgments people make of selfies posted on Facebook. Using an online experiment, we test how including a selfie on a Facebook status update changes people's appraisals of narcissism, message appropriateness, and social attraction. We also consider how the valence and intimacy of the status update text interplay with the selfie to change social judgments. Participants rated posts with selfies as more narcissistic and inappropriate, and less socially attractive. Selfie evaluations also depended upon the valence and intimacy of the status update text. Gender of the selfie poster did not influence evaluation of posts. One implication from these results is that posting selfies on social media may lead to negative judgments about the poster.


Subject(s)
Judgment , Narcissism , Social Media , Humans
6.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 6(10): 7885-94, 2014 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24780393

ABSTRACT

The electrical properties of La-silicate films grown by atomic layer deposition (ALD) on Ge substrates with different film configurations, such as various Si concentrations, Al2O3 interfacial passivation layers, and SiO2 capping layers, were examined. La-silicate thin films were deposited using alternating injections of the La[N{Si(CH3)3}2]3 precursor with O3 as the La and O precursors, respectively, at a substrate temperature of 310 °C. The Si concentration in the La-silicate films was further controlled by adding ALD cycles of SiO2. For comparison, La2O3 films were also grown using [La((i)PrCp)3] and O3 as the La precursor and oxygen source, respectively, at the identical substrate temperature. The capacitance-voltage (C-V) hysteresis decreased with an increasing Si concentration in the La-silicate films, although the films showed a slight increase in the capacitance equivalent oxide thickness. The adoption of Al2O3 at the interface as a passivation layer resulted in lower C-V hysteresis and a low leakage current density. The C-V hysteresis voltages of the La-silicate films with Al2O3 passivation and SiO2 capping layers was significantly decreased to ∼0.1 V, whereas the single layer La-silicate film showed a hysteresis voltage as large as ∼1.0 V.

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