This study was designed to investigate the effect of an interactive videodisc motor skill assessment training program on the development of preservice and inservice teachers' qualitative assessment proficiency on two motor skills: the overhand throw and catch. Twenty-seven preservice and 27 inservice physical education teachers were randomly assigned to one of three treatment conditions: interactive videodisc (IVD), teacher-directed (TD), or self-directed (SD). Motor skill qualitative assessment accuracy was evaluated on a pre- and post-test basis using a 50-item motor skill assessment accuracy test (10 performances rated on 5 components) for each skill. Analysis of covariance results indicated significant main effects for treatment for both skills. Post hoc tests revealed that for the overhand throw, the IVD and TD groups were superior to the SD group but not different from each other. For the catch, the IVD group was found to be superior to both the TD and SD groups. These findings are discussed in relation to the advantages of interactive videodisc in terms of efficiency and user independence and with comparable findings in other educational applications.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02701367.1989.10607451 | DOI Listing |
OMICS
July 2021
Department of Food Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Gaziantep University, Gaziantep, Turkey.
In a digital society, shall we be the authors of our own experience, not only during our lifetime but also after we die? We ask this question because dying and bereavement have become even harder, and much less private, in the digital age. New big data-driven digital industries and technologies are on the rise, with promises of interactive 3D avatars and storage of digital memories of the deceased, so they can continue to exist online as the "living dead" in a digital afterlife. Famous rock and roll icons like Roy Orbison, Frank Zappa, Ronnie James Dio, and Amy Winehouse have famously been turned into holograms that can once again give "live" performances on the touring circuit, often pulling in large audiences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Internet Res
June 2018
Centre for Innovation, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
Background: Video mediated meetings with patients were introduced in outpatient care at a hospital in Sweden. New behaviours and tasks emerged due to changes of roles, work processes and responsibilities. The study investigates effects of digital transformation, in this case how video visits in outpatient care change work processes and introduces new tasks, in order to further improve the concept of video visits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychosom Med
January 2017
From the University of Illinois (Awick, Ehlers, Fanning, Motl, McAuley), Urbana-Champaign, Illinois; Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine (Phillips), Chicago, Illinois; Bellarmine University (Wójcicki), Louisville, Kentucky; and University of Delaware (Mackenzie), Newark, Delaware.
Objective: Although center-based supervised physical activity interventions have proved to be successful in attenuating health declines in older adults, such methods can be costly and have limited reach. In the present study, we examined the effects of a DVD-delivered exercise intervention on self-esteem and its subdomains and the extent to which these effects were maintained. In addition, we examined whether psychological, demographic, and biological factors acted as determinants of self-esteem.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Ophthalmol
November 2016
Department of Ophthalmology, Nottingham University Hospitals, Nottingham, UK.
Background: Traditional treatment of amblyopia involves either wearing a patch or atropine penalisation of the better eye. A new treatment is being developed on the basis of virtual reality technology allowing either DVD footage or computer games which present a common background to both eyes and the foreground, containing the imagery of interest, only to the amblyopic eye.
Methods: A randomised control trial was performed on patients with amblyopia aged 4-8 years with three arms.
Med Decis Making
November 2015
University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA (CKT, DLF)
Background: The benefits of patient decision support interventions (DESIs) have been well documented. However, DESIs remain difficult to incorporate into clinical practice. Relational coordination (RC) has been shown to improve performance and quality of care in health care settings.
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