Hochschule für Angewandte Psychologie FHNW
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- Publication2. Begleitgruppentreffen: Forschungsprojekt «Intervention zur Risikoreduktion der multiplen antimikrobiellen Übertragungswege»(11.12.2019) Freivogel, Claudia; Lechner, Isabel; Visschers, Vivianne06 - Präsentation
- Publication2D vs 3D imaging for hold baggage screening(10/2019) Schwaninger, Adrian06 - Präsentation
- Publication3D imaging for hold baggage screening: The relevance of rotation and slicing functions(06.09.2022) Merks, Sarah; Sauer, Juergen; Schwaninger, Adrian06 - Präsentation
- Publication4 Deutungen zum Scheitern(Springer, 2016) Kunert, Sebastian; Thomann, Gerhard; Wehner, Theo; Clases, Christoph; Kunert, Sebastian [in: Failure Management. Ursachen und Folgen des Scheiterns]04A - Beitrag Sammelband
- PublicationA comparison of pig farmers' and veterinarians' perceptions and intentions to reduce antimicrobial usage in six European countries(Wiley, 2016) Visschers, Vivianne; Backhans, Annette; Collineau, Lucie; Loesken, Svenja; Nielsen, Elisabeth; Postma, Merel; Belloc, Catherine; Dewulf, Jeroen; Emanuelson, Ulf; Grosse Beilage, Elisabeth; Siegrist, Michael; Sjölund, Marie; Stärk, Katherina [in: Zoonoses and Public Health]Antimicrobial (AM) resistance is an increasing problem in human and veterinary medicine. To manage this problem, the usage of AM should be reduced in pig farming, as well as in other areas. It is important to investigate the factors that influence both pig farmers' and veterinarians' intentions to reduce AM usage, which is a prerequisite for developing intervention measures. We conducted a mail survey among pig farmers (N = 1,294) and an online survey among veterinarians (N = 334) in Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland. The farmers' survey assessed the perceived risks and benefits of and need for AM usage; the intention to reduce AM usage; farmers' efficacy (i.e. perception of their ability to reduce AM usage); support from their veterinarian; and the future reduction potential of AM usage. Additionally, self-reported reduction behaviours, the perceived farmers' barriers to reduce AM usage and relationships with farmers were assessed in the veterinarians' survey. The results showed that farmers and veterinarians had similar perceptions of the risks and benefits of AM usage. Veterinarians appeared to be more optimistic than pig farmers about reducing AM usage in pig farming. Farmers believed that their efficacy over AM reduction was relatively high. Farmers' intention to reduce AM usage and veterinarians' self-reported reduction behaviours were mainly associated with factors concerning the feasibility of reducing AM usage. To promote prudent AM usage, pig farmers should learn and experience how to reduce usage by applying alternative measures, whereas veterinarians should strengthen their advisory role and competencies to support and educate farmers.01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
- PublicationA cross-national comparison of incident reporting systems implemented in German and Swiss hospitals(Oxford University Press, 2017) Manser, Tanja; Imhof, Michael; Briner, Matthias; Lessing, Constanze [in: International Journal for Quality in Health Care]01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
- PublicationA digital tool to build the capacity of leaders to improve working conditions related to psychological health and well-being in teams: intervention approach, prototype, and evaluation design of the web-application “wecoach”(Frontiers Research Foundation, 2020) Grimm, Luisa A.; Bauer, Georg F.; Jenny, Gregor [in: Frontiers in Public Health]01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
- PublicationA first step on eye movements in office settings(Springer, 18.10.2011) Sury, Philipp; Hubalek, Sylvia; Schierz, Christoph [in: Zeitschrift für Arbeitswissenschaft]01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
- PublicationA human factors approach to teamwork and patient safety (keynote lecture)(05.02.2019) Manser, Tanja06 - Präsentation
- PublicationA model for human interruptability: experimental evaluation and automatic estimation from wearable sensors(30.05.2011) Kern, Nicky; Antifakos, Stavros; Schiele, Bernt; Schwaninger, Adrian [in: Eight IEEE International Symposium on Wearable Computers (ISWC '04)]04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublicationA modelling framework for complementary design of production planning and control systems(Taylor & Francis, 1999) Moscoso, Philip; Wäfler, Toni; Windischer, Anna [in: Ergonomics]01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
- PublicationA multi-method approach to capture quality of collaborative group engagement(International Society of the Learning Sciences, 2023) Paneth, Lisa; Jeitziner, Loris Tizian; Rack, Oliver; Zahn, Carmen; Damsa, Crina; Borge, Marcela; Koh, Elizabeth; Worsley, Marcelo [in: Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning - CSCL 2023]Multi-method approaches are an emerging trend in CSCL research as they allow to paint a more comprehensive picture of complex group learning processes than using a single method. In this contribution, we combined measures from different data sources to capture the quality of collaborative group engagement (QCGE) in CSCL-groups: QCGE-self-assessments, QCGE-ratings of verbal group communication, and video recorded nonverbal group behaviors. Using different methods of analysis, we visualized, described, and analyzed the data and related the measures to each other. Here, we present results suggesting that measures from different data sources are interrelated: For instance, nonverbal behavior (like nodding the head) is related to high QCGE-ratings of verbal communications. Results are preliminary and show disparities, too. Yet, we conclude that the multi-method approach results in a more comprehensive understanding of QCGE. Feasibility and suitability of the multi-method approach are discussed and conclusions for future research are drawn.04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublicationA Multi-Method Approach to Capture Quality of Collaborative Group Engagement(15.06.2023) Paneth, LisaMulti-method approaches are an emerging trend in CSCL research as they allow to paint a more comprehensive picture of complex group learning processes than using a single method. In this contribution, we combined measures from different data sources to capture the quality of collaborative group engagement (QCGE) in CSCL-groups: QCGE-self-assessments, QCGE-ratings of verbal group communication, and video recorded nonverbal group behaviors. Using different methods of analysis, we visualized, described, and analyzed the data and related the measures to each other. Here, we present results suggesting that measures from different data sources are interrelated: For instance, nonverbal behavior (like nodding the head) is related to high QCGE-ratings of verbal communications. Results are preliminary and show disparities, too. Yet, we conclude that the multi-method approach results in a more comprehensive understanding of QCGE. Feasibility and suitability of the multi-method approach are discussed and conclusions for future research are drawn.06 - Präsentation
- PublicationA new approach for boundary spanning collaboration - results and implications for from a case study at Daimler AG(14.07.2011) Schulze, Hartmut; Mbang, Sama; Stahl, Klaus [in: Proceedings of AHFEI 2008]04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublicationA new epistemic community in nuclear waste governance? Theoretical reflections and empirical observations on some fundamental challenges(Intellect, 2010) Stauffacher, Michael; Moser, Corinne [in: Catalan Journal of Communication & Cultural Studies]Discourses around nuclear waste were, for decades, dominated by techn(ocrat)ic debates. The respective international group of experts can be understood as an epistemic community (Haas 1992), as this community impacts on the way an issue is perceived and discussed. Yet, nuclear waste is not only a technical, but also a so-called socio-technical problem, and hence the discourses have been broadened. Lately, risk communication has become ubiquitous in discussions on the siting of nuclear waste across the globe. Lay knowledge, risk perception, involvement and procedural justice are some of the terms used and negotiated here. Thus, the question can be posed as to whether this trend will lead to the development of a new epistemic community that also includes experts on social scientific aspects. Using a set of different sources, we demonstrate potential difficulties in the mutual understanding of interdisciplinary teams in nuclear waste governance. We conclude by arguing that epistemological differences and structural challenges are so fundamental that it is unlikely that a new epistemic community will be able to develop.01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
- PublicationA Platform to Connect Swiss Consumers of Fair Trade Products with Producers in Developing Countries: Needs and Motivations(Springer, 2018) Klammer, Julia; Van den Anker, Fred; Marcus, Aaron; Wang, Wentao [in: Design, user experience, and usability. Users, contexts and case studies]04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublicationA psychological Study of Team Effectiveness and Leadership in Scrum Teams(2015) Maigatter, Anne; Zahn, Carmen11 - Studentische Arbeit
- PublicationA statistical approach for image difficulty estimation in x-ray screening using image measurements(ACM, 07/2007) Schwaninger, Adrian; Michel, Stefan; Bolfing, Anton; Wallraven, Christian; Sundstedt, Veronica [in: Proceedings of the 4th Symposium on Applied Perception in Graphics and Visualization]04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- Publication(Ab)Grenzen in der Digitalisierung(WEKA, 01.03.2023) Widler, Julia; Scherer, Aline [in: Personal Schweiz]Artikel zur Abgrenzung in der Digitalisierung im Fachmagazin personalSCHWEIZ01B - Beitrag in Magazin oder Zeitung