21 resultados para Digital marketing,Eye tracking,Web usability,User Interface
Resumo:
Introduction Les Echelles Lausannoises d'Auto-Evaluation des Difficultés et des Besoins ELADEB, est un outil utilisé en réhabilitation psychiatrique permettant de dresser le profil des problèmes rencontrés par les patients psychiatriques dans les principaux domaines de la vie quotidienne, ainsi que le besoin d'aide supplémentaire à celle déjà existante. Cet outil a déjà été validé dans une étude1 portant sur 94 patients et recueille un intérêt grandissant. Afin de compléter les données de validation recueillies lors de la première étude, nous présentons ici une seconde étude visant à comprendre d'avantage cet outil en le couplant à l'Eye tracker qui permet une étude du regard et ainsi observer des phénomènes visuels des sujets qui pratiquent l'auto-évaluation des difficultés et des besoins d'aide. Objectifs Cette étude pilote et exploratrice a pour but de mesurer l'exploration visuelle des cartes lors de l'évaluation d'ELADEB au travers des trois variables suivantes d'oculométrie récoltées au travers de l'outil de mesure de l'Eye tracker : (1) la variation de la taille pupillaire (pixels), (2) le rapport des nombres de points de fixation/temps, et (3) de la durée totale du temps de traitement de l'information de la carte (ms). Hypothèses. Le traitement visuel des cartes sélectionnées comme problèmes versus non problèmes sera différent chez tout le monde d'une part au niveau de : (1) la variation pupillaire, (2) du nombre de points de fixation de l'oeil/temps ainsi que (3) de la durée totale du traitement de l'information de la carte en fonction de notre compréhension. On peut poser l'hypothèse que l'émotion sera différente selon que la personne rencontre un problème ou non et ainsi, on peut s'attendre à ce que les cartes sélectionnées comme problèmes soient associées à une réaction émotionnelle plus importante que les autres, ce qui nous permettrait d'observer une corrélation entre le balayage visuel et ELADEB. Méthodes Cette étude exploratoire porte sur un échantillon de 10 sujets passant un test d'évaluation des difficultés et des besoins ELADEB, couplé à un appareil d'Eye tracking. Les critères d'inclusion des sujets sont : (1) hommes entre 30 et 40 ans, (2) dépourvu de symptômes psychotiques ou de psychoses. Les critères d'exclusion des sujets sont : (1) consommation d'alcool ou de drogues, (2) troubles psycho-organiques, (3) retard mental, (4) difficulté de compréhension de la langue française, (5) état de décompensation aiguë empêchant la réalisation de l'étude. Trois instruments sont utilisés comme supports d'analyses pour cette étude : (1) ELADEB, (2) l'Eye tracking et (3) le Gaze tracker. Le dispositif (2) d'Eye tracking se présente sous forme de lunettes particulières à porter par le sujet et qui permet de suivre les mouvements de l'oeil. L'une des caméras suit et enregistre les mouvements oculaires du sujet et permet de « voir en temps réel ce que voit le sujet et où il regarde » tandis que la seconde caméra scrute et analyse sa pupille. Les données sont ensuite répertoriées par le logiciel de mesures (3) « Gaze tracker », qui les analyse avec, à la fois une évaluation quantitative des points de fixation2 en se basant sur leurs nombres et leurs durées, ainsi qu'une mesure de la variation pupillaire fournie en pixels par le logiciel. Résultat(s) escompté(s) Il s'agit d'une étude exploratoire dans laquelle on espère retrouver les variations moyennes intra-sujets selon les hypothèses carte problème versus non problèmes. On peut s'attendre à trouver une retraduction des mesures de l'échelle ELADEB au travers de l'Eye tracking, ce qui concorderait avec les hypothèses énoncées et ajouterait encore d'avantage de validation à ELADEB au travers d'un outil pointu de mesure physiologique.
Resumo:
AbstractDigitalization gives to the Internet the power by allowing several virtual representations of reality, including that of identity. We leave an increasingly digital footprint in cyberspace and this situation puts our identity at high risks. Privacy is a right and fundamental social value that could play a key role as a medium to secure digital identities. Identity functionality is increasingly delivered as sets of services, rather than monolithic applications. So, an identity layer in which identity and privacy management services are loosely coupled, publicly hosted and available to on-demand calls could be more realistic and an acceptable situation. Identity and privacy should be interoperable and distributed through the adoption of service-orientation and implementation based on open standards (technical interoperability). Ihe objective of this project is to provide a way to implement interoperable user-centric digital identity-related privacy to respond to the need of distributed nature of federated identity systems. It is recognized that technical initiatives, emerging standards and protocols are not enough to guarantee resolution for the concerns surrounding a multi-facets and complex issue of identity and privacy. For this reason they should be apprehended within a global perspective through an integrated and a multidisciplinary approach. The approach dictates that privacy law, policies, regulations and technologies are to be crafted together from the start, rather than attaching it to digital identity after the fact. Thus, we draw Digital Identity-Related Privacy (DigldeRP) requirements from global, domestic and business-specific privacy policies. The requirements take shape of business interoperability. We suggest a layered implementation framework (DigldeRP framework) in accordance to model-driven architecture (MDA) approach that would help organizations' security team to turn business interoperability into technical interoperability in the form of a set of services that could accommodate Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA): Privacy-as-a-set-of- services (PaaSS) system. DigldeRP Framework will serve as a basis for vital understanding between business management and technical managers on digital identity related privacy initiatives. The layered DigldeRP framework presents five practical layers as an ordered sequence as a basis of DigldeRP project roadmap, however, in practice, there is an iterative process to assure that each layer supports effectively and enforces requirements of the adjacent ones. Each layer is composed by a set of blocks, which determine a roadmap that security team could follow to successfully implement PaaSS. Several blocks' descriptions are based on OMG SoaML modeling language and BPMN processes description. We identified, designed and implemented seven services that form PaaSS and described their consumption. PaaSS Java QEE project), WSDL, and XSD codes are given and explained.
Resumo:
The international Functional Annotation Of the Mammalian Genomes 4 (FANTOM4) research collaboration set out to better understand the transcriptional network that regulates macrophage differentiation and to uncover novel components of the transcriptome employing a series of high-throughput experiments. The primary and unique technique is cap analysis of gene expression (CAGE), sequencing mRNA 5'-ends with a second-generation sequencer to quantify promoter activities even in the absence of gene annotation. Additional genome-wide experiments complement the setup including short RNA sequencing, microarray gene expression profiling on large-scale perturbation experiments and ChIP-chip for epigenetic marks and transcription factors. All the experiments are performed in a differentiation time course of the THP-1 human leukemic cell line. Furthermore, we performed a large-scale mammalian two-hybrid (M2H) assay between transcription factors and monitored their expression profile across human and mouse tissues with qRT-PCR to address combinatorial effects of regulation by transcription factors. These interdependent data have been analyzed individually and in combination with each other and are published in related but distinct papers. We provide all data together with systematic annotation in an integrated view as resource for the scientific community (http://fantom.gsc.riken.jp/4/). Additionally, we assembled a rich set of derived analysis results including published predicted and validated regulatory interactions. Here we introduce the resource and its update after the initial release.
Resumo:
The determination of line crossing sequences between rollerball pens and laser printers presents difficulties that may not be overcome using traditional techniques. This research aimed to study the potential of digital microscopy and 3-D laser profilometry to determine line crossing sequences between a toner and an aqueous ink line. Different paper types, rollerball pens, and writing pressure were tested. Correct opinions of the sequence were given for all case scenarios, using both techniques. When the toner was printed before the ink, a light reflection was observed in all crossing specimens, while this was never observed in the other sequence types. The 3-D laser profilometry, more time-consuming, presented the main advantage of providing quantitative results. The findings confirm the potential of the 3-D laser profilometry and demonstrate the efficiency of digital microscopy as a new technique for determining the sequence of line crossings involving rollerball pen ink and toner. With the mass marketing of laser printers and the popularity of rollerball pens, the determination of line crossing sequences between such instruments is encountered by forensic document examiners. This type of crossing presents difficulties with optical microscopic line crossing techniques involving ballpoint pens or gel pens and toner (1-4). Indeed, the rollerball's aqueous ink penetrates through the toner and is absorbed by the fibers of the paper, leaving the examiner with the impression that the toner is above the ink even when it is not (5). Novotny and Westwood (3) investigated the possibility of determining aqueous ink and toner crossing sequences by microscopic observation of the intersection before and after toner removal. A major disadvantage of their study resides in destruction of the sample by scraping off the toner line to see what was underneath. The aim of this research was to investigate the ways to overcome these difficulties through digital microscopy and three-dimensional (3-D) laser profilometry. The former was used as a technique for the determination of sequences between gel pen and toner printing strokes, but provided less conclusive results than that of an optical stereomicroscope (4). 3-D laser profilometry, which allows one to observe and measure the topography of a surface, has been the subject of a number of recent studies in this area. Berx and De Kinder (6) and Schirripa Spagnolo (7,8) have tested the application of laser profilometry to determine the sequence of intersections of several lines. The results obtained in these studies overcome disadvantages of other methods applied in this area, such as scanning electron microscope or the atomic force microscope. The main advantages of 3-D laser profilometry include the ease of implementation of the technique and its nondestructive nature, which does not require sample preparation (8-10). Moreover, the technique is reproducible and presents a high degree of freedom in the vertical axes (up to 1000 μm). However, when the paper surface presents a given roughness, if the pen impressions alter the paper with a depth similar to the roughness of medium, the results are not always conclusive (8). It becomes difficult in this case to distinguish which characteristics can be imputed to the pen impressions or the quality of the paper surface. This important limitation is assessed by testing different types of paper of variable quality (of different grammage and finishing) and the writing pressure. The authors will therefore assess the limits of 3-D laser profilometry technique and determine whether the method can overcome such constraints. Second, the authors will investigate the use of digital microscopy because it presents a number of advantages: it is efficient, user-friendly, and provides an objective evaluation and interpretation.
Resumo:
The M-Coffee server is a web server that makes it possible to compute multiple sequence alignments (MSAs) by running several MSA methods and combining their output into one single model. This allows the user to simultaneously run all his methods of choice without having to arbitrarily choose one of them. The MSA is delivered along with a local estimation of its consistency with the individual MSAs it was derived from. The computation of the consensus multiple alignment is carried out using a special mode of the T-Coffee package [Notredame, Higgins and Heringa (T-Coffee: a novel method for fast and accurate multiple sequence alignment. J. Mol. Biol. 2000; 302: 205-217); Wallace, O'Sullivan, Higgins and Notredame (M-Coffee: combining multiple sequence alignment methods with T-Coffee. Nucleic Acids Res. 2006; 34: 1692-1699)] Given a set of sequences (DNA or proteins) in FASTA format, M-Coffee delivers a multiple alignment in the most common formats. M-Coffee is a freeware open source package distributed under a GPL license and it is available either as a standalone package or as a web service from www.tcoffee.org.