4 resultados para Support group
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
No presente Relatório apresenta-se o Projeto “No Encontro Comigo e Com os Outros”, desenvolvido com um grupo de mães de pessoas com deficiência intelectual. Este Projeto propõe uma resposta de apoio e de partilha num grupo de mães, visando o estabelecimento de relações em grupo, para que se reflita de forma autónoma nos problemas comuns. Desta forma, este Projeto, para além de propor encontros de apoio emocional, aponta para o envolvimento das mães nas atividades institucionais da Associação que os filhos frequentam. Os desafios colocados às famílias com filhos com deficiência fundamentaram o desenvolvimento de um Projeto em Educação e Intervenção Social, enquanto promotor de reflexão e de autonomia. Neste sentido, todo o Projeto posicionou-se, metodologicamente, na Investigação Ação-Participativa, onde, com as pessoas, se recolheu e analisou toda a informação que conduzia aos problemas e necessidades evidenciados. A finalidade deste projeto, e todos os objetivos propostos, foram, assim, ao encontro dos problemas e necessidades priorizados pelos intervenientes, propondo-se, a partir de um conjunto de ações, alcançar uma nova realidade. Desta forma, os resultados obtidos com o Projeto foram satisfatórios, por ter contribuído para o estabelecimento de laços entre as mães, por ter fomentando a partilha e a reflexão acerca dos problemas vivenciados e por ter envolvido as mesmas nos processos institucionais. Deficiência, Família, Grupo de Apoio, Partilha, Relação.
Resumo:
Group decision making plays an important role in organizations, especially in the present-day economy that demands high-quality, yet quick decisions. Group decision-support systems (GDSSs) are interactive computer-based environments that support concerted, coordinated team efforts toward the completion of joint tasks. The need for collaborative work in organizations has led to the development of a set of general collaborative computer-supported technologies and specific GDSSs that support distributed groups (in time and space) in various domains. However, each person is unique and has different reactions to various arguments. Many times a disagreement arises because of the way we began arguing, not because of the content itself. Nevertheless, emotion, mood, and personality factors have not yet been addressed in GDSSs, despite how strongly they influence results. Our group’s previous work considered the roles that emotion and mood play in decision making. In this article, we reformulate these factors and include personality as well. Thus, this work incorporates personality, emotion, and mood in the negotiation process of an argumentbased group decision-making process. Our main goal in this work is to improve the negotiation process through argumentation using the affective characteristics of the involved participants. Each participant agent represents a group decision member. This representation lets us simulate people with different personalities. The discussion process between group members (agents) is made through the exchange of persuasive arguments. Although our multiagent architecture model4 includes two types of agents—the facilitator and the participant— this article focuses on the emotional, personality, and argumentation components of the participant agent.
Resumo:
Involving groups in important management processes such as decision making has several advantages. By discussing and combining ideas, counter ideas, critical opinions, identified constraints, and alternatives, a group of individuals can test potentially better solutions, sometimes in the form of new products, services, and plans. In the past few decades, operations research, AI, and computer science have had tremendous success creating software systems that can achieve optimal solutions, even for complex problems. The only drawback is that people don’t always agree with these solutions. Sometimes this dissatisfaction is due to an incorrect parameterization of the problem. Nevertheless, the reasons people don’t like a solution might not be quantifiable, because those reasons are often based on aspects such as emotion, mood, and personality. At the same time, monolithic individual decisionsupport systems centered on optimizing solutions are being replaced by collaborative systems and group decision-support systems (GDSSs) that focus more on establishing connections between people in organizations. These systems follow a kind of social paradigm. Combining both optimization- and socialcentered approaches is a topic of current research. However, even if such a hybrid approach can be developed, it will still miss an essential point: the emotional nature of group participants in decision-making tasks. We’ve developed a context-aware emotion based model to design intelligent agents for group decision-making processes. To evaluate this model, we’ve incorporated it in an agent-based simulator called ABS4GD (Agent-Based Simulation for Group Decision), which we developed. This multiagent simulator considers emotion- and argument based factors while supporting group decision-making processes. Experiments show that agents endowed with emotional awareness achieve agreements more quickly than those without such awareness. Hence, participant agents that integrate emotional factors in their judgments can be more successful because, in exchanging arguments with other agents, they consider the emotional nature of group decision making.
Resumo:
Secure group communication is a paradigm that primarily designates one-to-many communication security. The proposed works relevant to secure group communication have predominantly considered the whole network as being a single group managed by a central powerful node capable of supporting heavy communication, computation and storage cost. However, a typical Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) may contain several groups, and each one is maintained by a sensor node (the group controller) with constrained resources. Moreover, the previously proposed schemes require a multicast routing support to deliver the rekeying messages. Nevertheless, multicast routing can incur heavy storage and communication overheads in the case of a wireless sensor network. Due to these two major limitations, we have reckoned it necessary to propose a new secure group communication with a lightweight rekeying process. Our proposal overcomes the two limitations mentioned above, and can be applied to a homogeneous WSN with resource-constrained nodes with no need for a multicast routing support. Actually, the analysis and simulation results have clearly demonstrated that our scheme outperforms the previous well-known solutions.