Academic literature on the topic 'Smart intervention'

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Journal articles on the topic "Smart intervention"

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Agius, Joseph. "Fluency SIS: Smart Intervention Strategy." Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 193 (June 2015): 7–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2015.03.239.

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Bholey, Mihir. "SMART CITIES AND SUSTAINABLE URBANISM: A STUDY FROM POLICY AND DESIGN PERSPECTIVE." Scholedge International Journal of Multidisciplinary & Allied Studies ISSN 2394-336X 4, no. 6 (July 5, 2017): 36. http://dx.doi.org/10.19085/journal.sijmas040601.

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This paper examines India’s foray into building hundred smart cities from multiple perspectives viz. urban challenges, urban policies, sustainable urbanism, emerging global models and design and technology intervention. It also evaluates the relative challenges of building new smart cities like Masdar or Songdo and applying smart interventions to retrofit the aging and ailing urban infrastructure of the existing Indian cities. Based on the data from the secondary sources it examines the priority areas and the possibilities of making smart intervention through use of appropriate technology and design. While doing so, it brings into discussion India’s urban challenges and its policy of urban development over the years besides the recurring development deficit. Today, Indian cities are faced with huge infrastructure deficit which reflects in their performance and service delivery. The imperative to ensure urban rejuvenation now reflects in the recent policy of creating hundred smart cities in India. This paper also discusses howtechnology and design interventions at appropriate levels canaugment urban infrastructure and make a sustainable urban eco-system called smart city.
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Hanish, Alyson, Abbey Jo Klein, Therese Mathews, Ann Berger, Kevin Kupzyk, Cindy Ellis, and Brett Kuhn. "631 Sleep SMART in Adolescents with Neurodevelopmental Disorders." Sleep 44, Supplement_2 (May 1, 2021): A247—A248. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsab072.629.

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Abstract Introduction: Introduction Sleep disturbances are common in adolescents with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs). Inclusion of vulnerable populations such as adolescents with NDDs into sleep intervention efforts is essential as they are at high-risk for poor physical/mental health outcomes. The objective of this study is to pilot a sequential, multiple assignment, randomized trial (SMART) design to compare the impact of a sequence of sleep interventions, based on treatment response, to optimize sleep health in adolescents with NDDs. Methods: Methods Recruitment began June 2019 using convenience sampling. The SMART pilot feasibility study includes 1-week of baseline sleep data, and two 4-week periods of a sleep intervention (9-week total study enrollment). Interventions include exogenous melatonin, The Bedtime Bank, and their combination. Exogenous melatonin (liquid, immediate release, 3mg) is administered 30 minutes before bedtime. The Bedtime Bank, a behavioral sleep intervention, is based upon contingency contracting that relies on a credit- or debt-based system to hold adolescents accountable for maintaining a consistent bedtime. At baseline participants completed demographics, PROMIS pediatric sleep questionnaires, the Cleveland Adolescent Sleepiness Questionnaire (CASQ), salivary & urinary endogenous melatonin measurement, and one week of actigraphy. Upon enrollment, participants were randomly assigned to either melatonin or The Bedtime Bank. Participants who respond (nightly increase in total sleep time (TST) ≥18 minutes) remain on the assigned intervention; if non-responsive participants are re-randomized to a different sleep intervention or combination. Results: Results At baseline, participants (n=29, aged 10–18 years) had an average TST of 7 hours 11 minutes. PROMIS Sleep Disturbance (M=64.3, SE=2.5), PROMIS Sleep-Related Impairment scores (M=58.9, SE=2.2), and CASQ scores (M=40.0, SD= 10.5) were higher than reported normative values. Salivary DLMO & urinary 6-sulfatoyxmelatonin analysis is ongoing. For participants who completed the full 9-week trial, nearly 30% (n=7/24) were responsive (increased baseline TST ≥18 minutes) to one of the 4-week interventions. Conclusion: Conclusion Baseline data of the enrolled participants demonstrates poor indicators of TST, sleep disturbance, and sleep related impairment. Preliminary results of this SMART indicate some adolescents are responsive to sleep interventions aimed to improve their TST. Support (if any) Support: This clinical trial is funded by the National Institute of Nursing Research, National Institutes of Health (1K01NR017465-01A1).
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Koo, Bon-Kwon. "The Smart Strategy for Side Branch Intervention." JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions 9, no. 6 (March 2016): 527–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcin.2015.12.276.

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Lucock, Mike, Serena Bartys, Jade Cupac, Jaime Delgadillo, Charlotte Denton, Sarah Gaines, Dean McMillan, Andrew Prestwich, and Rick Stebbings. "Using Implementation Intentions to Prevent Relapse after Psychological Treatment for Depression – the SMArT Intervention." Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy 46, no. 5 (April 18, 2018): 626–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1352465818000255.

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Background: It is recognized that a significant proportion of people with depression are prone to relapse, even after successful treatment, and that self-management interventions should be developed and provided. There is evidence that implementation intentions (IMPS) can be successfully applied to health-related behaviours but their application to self-management of mental health problems has been limited. Aims: This paper describes the design and initial evaluation of a Self-Management After Therapy (SMArT) intervention, which incorporated IMPS and followed psychological therapy for depression. We sought to assess the feasibility and acceptability of SMArT. Method: The SMArT intervention was designed with reference to the MRC guidance on developing and evaluating complex interventions and co-designed with and implemented in a UK Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) service. Eleven patients who were in remission following treatment for depression received the SMArT intervention, provided by Psychological Wellbeing Practitioners (PWPs). The evaluation used routine IAPT outcome measures at each session, feedback from patients and PWPs, and analysis of the type of IMPS identified and their fidelity with the model. Six patients provided brief feedback about the intervention to an independent researcher. Results: Feedback from patients and PWPs suggested that the intervention was feasible, acceptable and could potentially help patients to stay well after therapy. Patients confirmed the value of setting their own goals in the form of IMPS, receiving support from PWPs and in some cases from partners, friends and family members. Conclusions: Implementation intentions are a promising approach to support the self-management of depression.
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Mustanski, Brian, David A. Moskowitz, Kevin O. Moran, Michael E. Newcomb, Kathryn Macapagal, Carlos Rodriguez-Díaz, H. Jonathon Rendina, et al. "Evaluation of a Stepped-Care eHealth HIV Prevention Program for Diverse Adolescent Men Who Have Sex With Men: Protocol for a Hybrid Type 1 Effectiveness Implementation Trial of SMART." JMIR Research Protocols 9, no. 8 (August 11, 2020): e19701. http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/19701.

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Background Adolescent men who have sex with men (AMSM), aged 13 to 18 years, account for more than 80% of teen HIV occurrences. Despite this disproportionate burden, there is a conspicuous lack of evidence-based HIV prevention programs. Implementation issues are critical as traditional HIV prevention delivery channels (eg, community-based organizations, schools) have significant access limitations for AMSM. As such, eHealth interventions, such as our proposed SMART program, represent an excellent modality for delivering AMSM-specific intervention material where youth are. Objective This randomized trial aimed to test the effectiveness of the SMART program in reducing condom-less anal sex and increasing condom self-efficacy, condom use intentions, and HIV testing for AMSM. We also plan to test whether SMART has differential effectiveness across important subgroups of AMSM based on race and ethnicity, urban versus rural residence, age, socioeconomic status, and participation in an English versus a Spanish version of SMART. Methods Using a sequential multiple assignment randomized trial design, we will evaluate the impact of a stepped-care package of increasingly intensive eHealth interventions (ie, the universal, information-based SMART Sex Ed; the more intensive, selective SMART Squad; and a higher cost, indicated SMART Sessions). All intervention content is available in English and Spanish. Participants are recruited primarily from social media sources using paid and unpaid advertisements. Results The trial has enrolled 1285 AMSM aged 13 to 18 years, with a target enrollment of 1878. Recruitment concluded in June 2020. Participants were recruited from 49 US states as well as Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia. Assessments of intervention outcomes at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months are ongoing. Conclusions SMART is the first web-based program for AMSM to take a stepped-care approach to sexual education and HIV prevention. This design indicates that SMART delivers resources to all adolescents, but more costly treatments (eg, video chat counseling in SMART Sessions) are conserved for individuals who need them the most. SMART has the potential to reach AMSM to provide them with a sex-positive curriculum that empowers them with the information, motivation, and skills to make better health choices. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT03511131; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03511131 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID) DERR1-10.2196/19701
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Fraser, Emma, and Clancy Wilmott. "Ruins of the smart city: a visual intervention." Visual Communication 19, no. 3 (May 26, 2020): 353–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1470357220919265.

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The visual imaginary of the future city is increasingly dichotomized between visions of hyper-technological digital urbanism and the city in a state of ruin, without people, overtaken by nature. These alternating imaginaries key into concerns over urban futures, as questions of sustainability and rising inequality come to bear on urban life. Such binary imaginaries produce volumes of visual material, lauding and critiquing philosophies of newness, endless progress and the city without decline. This article uses an inventive visual methodology to ask how these imaginaries become situated in the everyday ecologies of living. This methodology focuses on several so-called ‘brownfield’ sites in Salford, UK, and the ‘smart’ Oxford Road Corridor in neighbouring Manchester, to playfully and visually map the entanglement of digital urban ecologies through the themes of wilderness, play and compost. These three themes relate to the pleasure of urban wilderness described by Rose Macaulay, reflecting on London’s wild ruins after the Second World War; the playful contrast between smart urbanism and urban wastelands, understood through interdisciplinary visual methods; and Haraway’s notion of compost as the fertile ground of collaboration that marks a material–semiotic entanglement between place, people and nature. The authors investigate how these frameworks reflect the diversity of urban ecology (animals, plants and humans) and might provide an alternative vision of how the city could be, a vision built from how the city currently is.
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de Falco, Stefano, Margarita Angelidou, and Jean-Paul D. Addie. "From the “smart city” to the “smart metropolis”? Building resilience in the urban periphery." European Urban and Regional Studies 26, no. 2 (July 20, 2018): 205–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0969776418783813.

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The “smart city” has risen to global prominence over the past two decades as an urban planning and development strategy. As a broad but contested toolkit of technological services and policy interventions aimed at improving the efficacy and efficiency of urban systems, the “smart city” is subject to several pressing critiques. This paper acknowledges these concerns, but recognizes the potential of “urban intelligence” to enhance the resiliency of metropolitan areas. As such, we focus on an under-researched dimension of smart city urbanism: its application in peripheral urban areas. The paper introduces a threefold typology of: (a) geographic (spatial); (b) hard (material); and (c) soft (social) urban peripherality. Second, it reviews the concept of urban resilience and considers how its central characteristics can inform the objectives and implementation of “smart city” infrastructures and planning. Six European smart city plans are assessed via a qualitative content analysis, to identify the target of smart city actions; the characteristics of urban resilience mobilized; and the spatial focus of planned interventions. The comparative analysis reveals a variegated set of smart-city approaches. Notably, “smart” actions aimed at enhancing social innovation are the most common type of intervention, while overall there remains a strong tendency for smart urbanism to focus on the urban core. We conclude by calling for a research agenda addressing smartness in, of, and for, peripheral urban spaces and communities.
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Theofanopoulou, Nikki, Katherine Isbister, Julian Edbrooke-Childs, and Petr Slovák. "A Smart Toy Intervention to Promote Emotion Regulation in Middle Childhood: Feasibility Study." JMIR Mental Health 6, no. 8 (August 5, 2019): e14029. http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/14029.

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Background A common challenge with existing psycho-social prevention interventions for children is the lack of effective, engaging, and scalable delivery mechanisms, especially beyond in-person therapeutic or school-based contexts. Although digital technology has the potential to address these issues, existing research on technology-enabled interventions for families remains limited. This paper focuses on emotion regulation (ER) as an example of a core protective factor that is commonly targeted by prevention interventions. Objective The aim of this pilot study was to provide an initial validation of the logic model and feasibility of in situ deployment for a new technology-enabled intervention, designed to support children’s in-the-moment ER efforts. The novelty of the proposed approach relies on delivering the intervention through an interactive object (a smart toy) sent home with the child, without any prior training necessary for either the child or their carer. This study examined (1) engagement and acceptability of the toy in the homes during 1-week deployments, and (2) qualitative indicators of ER effects, as reported by parents and children. Results Across all families, parents and children reported that the smart toy was incorporated into the children’s ER practices and engaged with naturally in moments the children wanted to relax or calm down. Data suggested that the children interacted with the toy throughout the deployment, found the experience enjoyable, and all requested to keep the toy longer. Children’s emotional connection to the toy appears to have driven this strong engagement. Parents reported satisfaction with and acceptability of the toy. Conclusions This is the first known study on the use of technology-enabled intervention delivery to support ER in situ. The strong engagement, incorporation into children’s ER practices, and qualitative indications of effects are promising. Further efficacy research is needed to extend these indicative data by examining the psychological efficacy of the proposed intervention. More broadly, our findings argue for the potential of a technology-enabled shift in how future prevention interventions are designed and delivered: empowering children and parents through child-led, situated interventions, where participants learn through actionable support directly within family life, as opposed to didactic in-person workshops and a subsequent skills application.
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Joseph, Rodney P., Colleen Keller, Sonia Vega-López, Marc A. Adams, Rebekah English, Kevin Hollingshead, Steven P. Hooker, Michael Todd, Glenn A. Gaesser, and Barbara E. Ainsworth. "A Culturally Relevant Smartphone-Delivered Physical Activity Intervention for African American Women: Development and Initial Usability Tests of Smart Walk." JMIR mHealth and uHealth 8, no. 3 (March 2, 2020): e15346. http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/15346.

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Background Smart Walk is a culturally relevant, social cognitive theory–based, smartphone-delivered intervention designed to increase physical activity (PA) and reduce cardiometabolic disease risk among African American (AA) women. Objective This study aimed to describe the development and initial usability testing results of Smart Walk. Methods Smart Walk was developed in 5 phases. Phases 1 to 3 focused on initial intervention development, phase 4 involved usability testing, and phase 5 included intervention refinement based on usability testing results. In phase 1, a series of 9 focus groups with 25 AA women (mean age 38.5 years, SD 7.8; mean BMI 39.4 kg/m2, SD 7.3) was used to identify cultural factors associated with PA and ascertain how constructs of social cognitive theory can be leveraged in the design of a PA intervention. Phase 2 included the analysis of phase 1 qualitative data and development of the structured PA intervention. Phase 3 focused on the technical development of the smartphone app used to deliver the intervention. Phase 4 consisted of a 1-month usability trial of Smart Walk (n=12 women; mean age 35.0 years, SD 8.5; mean BMI 40 kg/m2, SD 5.0). Phase 5 included refinement of the intervention based on the usability trial results. Results The 5-phase process resulted in the development of the Smart Walk smartphone-delivered PA intervention. This PA intervention was designed to target social cognitive theory constructs of behavioral capability, outcome expectations, social support, self-efficacy, and self-regulation and address deep structure sociocultural characteristics of collectivism, racial pride, and body appearance preferences of AA women. Key features of the smartphone app included (1) personal profile pages, (2) multimedia PA promotion modules (ie, electronic text and videos), (3) discussion boards, and (4) a PA self-monitoring tool. Participants also received 3 PA promotion text messages each week. Conclusions The development process of Smart Walk was designed to maximize the usability, cultural relevance, and impact of the smartphone-delivered PA intervention.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Smart intervention"

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Johnshoy, Jenna M. "A program evaluation of the smart and healthy alcohol use intervention." Online version, 2009. http://www.uwstout.edu/lib/thesis/2009/2009johnshoyj.pdf.

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Gillespie, Paige Elizabeth. "An Elementary Wellness Program: Eat Smart! Play Hard!" Miami University / OhioLINK, 2012. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=miami1354140652.

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Soltani, Nejad Farideh. "SitLight : a Wearable Intervention for Improving Sitting Behavior." Thesis, Umeå universitet, Institutionen för informatik, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-149740.

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Various studies have taken different approaches to persuade users into adopting a healthy sitting posture. In addition to the sedentary lifestyles we have come to adopt, the importance and reasoning of these studies stem from the adverse effects of poor posture on our health and mood. However, studies approaching this area with real-time visual modality integrated into clothing are rather sparse. Utilizing this integration might potentially fulfill the requirements of the ubiquitous computing era and inform the users in a calmer way. To evaluate various aspects of this concept, a mid-fidelity prototype was developed and tested with users. Semi-structured interviews were then conducted to obtain their thoughts and opinions on such an approach. In addition to the approval of the concept, further concerns, advantages and disadvantages were disclosed, and used to inform a design space for similar concepts. Although requiring more research, the results of this study outline a primary design space consisting of essential characteristics one needs to be aware of when designing a similar concept.
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Jan, Jonathan. "Collecting Data for Building Automation Analytics : A case study for collecting operational data with minimal human intervention." Thesis, KTH, Radio Systems Laboratory (RS Lab), 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-233319.

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Approximately 40% of the total energy consumption within the EU is due to buildings, and similar numbers can be found in the US. If the principal inefficiencies in buildings were easily identifiable, then a facility manager could focus their resources to make the buildings more efficient, which would lead to both cost savings for the facility owners and decrease the building’s ecological footprint. In building automation systems today, data is already being collected every second, but due to the lack of standardization for describing this data, having access to data is not the same as being able to make use of it. The existing heterogeneity makes it very costly to gather data from multiple buildings, thus making it difficult to understand the big picture. Facility managers cannot fix what they cannot see; thus it is important to facilitate the visualization of the data collected from all of the different building automation systems. This potentially offers great benefits with regards to both sustainability and economy. In this thesis, the author’s goal is to propose a sustainable, cost and time effective data integration strategy for real estate owners who wish to gain greater insight into their buildings’ efficiency. The study begins with a literature study to find previous and on-going attempts to solve this problem. Some initiatives for standardization of semantic models were found. Two of these models, Brick and Haystack, were chosen. One building automation system (BAS) was tested in a pilot case study, to test the appropriateness of a solution. The key results from this thesis project show that data from building automation systems, can be integrated into an analysis platform, and an extract, transform, and load (ETL) process for this is presented. How time efficiently data can be tagged and transformed into a common format is very dependent upon the current control system’s data storage format and whether information about its structure is adequate. It is also noted that there is no guarantee that facility managers have access to the control system’s database or information about how that is structured, in such cases other techniques can be used such as BACnet/IP, or Open Platform Communications (OPC) Unified Architecture.
Ungefär 40 % av den totala energikonsumtionen i E.U. och U.S.A. förbrukas av fastigheter. Om de delar av fastigheten som är ineffektiva enkelt kunde identifieras, skulle det underlätta fastighetsförvaltarnas arbete i att göra byggnader mer energisnåla. Detta har i sin tur potential att minska kostnader och byggnaders ekologiska fotavtryck. I dagens fastighetsautomationssystem samlas data in varje sekund, men på grund av att det saknas ett standardiserat sätt att beskriva den på, är det skillnad på att ha tillgång till data och att faktiskt kunna använda sig av den. Heterogeniteten gör att det blir både kostsamt och tidskrävande för fastighetsförvaltare att samla in data från sina fastigheter. Fastighetsförvaltare kan inte åtgärda något det inte kan se. Därför är det viktigt att underlätta möjligheten för visualisering av data från olika typer av fastighetsautomationssystem. Att lyckas med detta har potential att ge positiva effekter både när det gäller hållbarhet och ekonomi. I den här uppsatsen är författarens mål att komma fram till en hållbar, kostnads- och tidseffektiv integrationsstrategi för fastighetsförvaltare som vill få bättre insikter hur effektiv deras byggnad faktiskt är. Forskningsarbetet inleds med en litteraturstudie för att finna tidigare och pågående försök att lösa detta problem. Några initiativ för standardisering av semantiska modeller för att beskriva data inom fastighetsautomation hittades. Två av dessa, Brick och Project Haystack, valdes ut. En byggnad, och ett fastighetsautomationssystem testades i en pilotstudie. Resultaten från studien pekar på att data från fastighetautomationssystem kan integreras med en analysplattform, och en så kallad ETL-process, efter de engelska orden: extract, transform, load; presenteras för att uppnå det målet. Hur tidseffektivt data kan taggas och transformeras beror på det nuvarande kontrollsystemets datalagringsformat och om information om dess struktur är adekvat. Det noteras att det inte finns någon garanti till att få åtkomst till kontrollsystemets databas, eller information om dess struktur, därför presenteras även alternativa tekniker, däribland BACnet/IP och Open Platform Communications (OPC) Unified Architecture.
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Ambrosetti-Giudici, Sveva. "Wireless smart surgical instrumentation for spinal interventions." [S.l.] : [s.n.], 2009. http://www.zb.unibe.ch/download/eldiss/09ambrosetti_s.pdf.

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Fabbri, Martina. "Smart hospitality. Intervento di recupero sostenibile a bertinoro." Master's thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2014. http://amslaurea.unibo.it/6868/.

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Dickinson, Sarah E. "Smart Start for Trauma: A Multiple Baseline Design." Scholar Commons, 2018. https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7498.

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The purpose of this study was to address gaps in the trauma treatment literature related to the expense and inaccessibility of evidence-based interventions for children with disabilities who have experienced trauma. Another aim of this study was to provide additional support for a newly piloted intervention for children with disabilities who have experienced trauma. This intervention is known as Smart Start: Parenting Tools for Children with Developmental Delay, Social-Emotional Concerns, and Trauma. A non-concurrent multiple baseline method was used to determine whether there was a functional relationship between the intervention and children’s challenging behaviors for five caregiver-child dyads. In addition, three of five caregiver-child dyads were assessed for improvements in child PTSD symptomatology, positive parenting practices, parenting stress, and treatment acceptability. Results from visual analysis, masked visual analysis, and hierarchical linear modeling were mixed, but generally supported a statistically and clinically significant relationship between participation in Smart Start and improved caregiver ratings of children’s challenging behaviors. Wilcoxon Signed-Rank test did not show statistically significant changes in interventionists’ ratings of challenging behavior, but descriptively, four of five children were rated as improved. Reliable change index scores revealed statistically significant changes in trauma symptoms and parenting stress for two participants. Positive parenting practices improved significantly for all participants according to the reliable change index. The intervention was implemented with good fidelity. All caregivers found Smart Start highly acceptable. Future research with larger samples is warranted based on the extremely promising results of the present study.
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Sánchez, Morales Sergio. "Attraktiva och smarta tunnelbanestationer i Stockholm : En studie av dagens förhållanden som utgångspunkt för framtida insatser." Thesis, KTH, Urbana och regionala studier, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-206540.

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Intresset som ligger till grund för denna rapport är att få moderna och attraktiva tunnelbanestationer i den närmaste framtiden. Formgivningen av framtida tunnelbanestationer i Stockholm kräver att man tar hänsyn till ett antal faktorer. Vissa av dessa faktorer studeras redan i dokumentet Gestaltningsprogrammet för tunnelbanan till Nacka – vilket är utgångspunkt för den föreliggande slutrapporten – medan andra successivt måste introduceras för att åstadkomma smartare lösningar i kommande tider.   Hur upplever en grupp av yrkesverksamma experter Stockholms tunnelbanestationer idag? Vilka är, enligt dessa experter, de rådande förhållandena som begränsar stationernas attraktivitet och, i så fall, vilka åtgärder kan främja denna attraktivitet i framtiden? Hur kan IKT-lösningar integreras i gestaltningen av moderna och attraktiva tunnelbanestationer för Stockholm i den närmaste framtiden?  Dessa är de centrala frågor som leder undersökning i föreliggande rapport, genom en litteraturstudie och elva semistrukturerade intervjuer.   Insamlingen av det studerade materialet tillsammans med analysresultaten ledde till följande påstående: för att uppnå attraktiva och moderna tunnelbanestationer bör ett presumtivt gestaltningsprogram inkludera alla begrepp som har undersökts i rapporten – dvs. attraktivitet, hållbarhet, tidstålighet, trygghet och tillgänglighet – med tillägg av konceptet "smarta anläggningar". Däremot bör dessa värdeord inte ses som fristående delar, utan som sammanbundna delar i ett helhetsperspektiv.   Tunnelbanesystemet i Stockholm bör säkerställa en rad åtgärder på kort och medellång sikt. Dessa åtgärder ska i sin tur vara grunden till kvalitetsprånget som krävs för att staden kan dra nytta av attraktivare tunnelbanestationer i det långa loppet. De föreslagna åtgärderna bör tillföra både konkreta men även potentiella lösningar för arkitekter och planerare; öka uppfattningen av framtida tunnelbanestationer som attraktiva och moderna samt gynna en hög grad av upplevelsevärde i tunnelbanestationsmiljön.   Däremot kvarstår mycket arbete, framfor allt vad det gäller tillämplighet att de föreslagna insatser samt andra lösningar som kan dyka upp under framtida studier, vilket i sin tur kommer att kräva en mer detaljerad analys framöver. Föreliggande rapport ska således fungera som ett underlag och en inspirationskälla för detta fortlöpande arbete.
The aim for this report is to propose potential strategies in order to develop more modern and attractive subway stations in the near future. The design of future subway stations in Stockholm requires a number of factors to be taken into account. Some of these factors are already under study in the Design program for the metro line to Nacka – which is the starting point for the present final report – while others must be gradually introduced when aiming for smarter solutions in the future.   How does a group of professional experts experience Stockholm's subway stations today? What, according to these experts, are the prevailing conditions that limit the attractiveness of these stations and, if so, what measures can promote this attractiveness in the future? How can ICT solutions be integrated into the design of modern and attractive subway stations for Stockholm in the near future? These are the essential questions to be answered by this report, using a literature survey and eleven semi-structured interviews.   The collection of studied material along with the analysis of the results led to the following statement: in order to achieve attractive and modern subway, a presumptive design program should include all the concepts studied in the report – i.e. attractiveness, durability, sustainability, security, and accessibility –, but not as standalone elements, but as interconnected components of a holistic perspective.   The underground system in Stockholm should ensure a range of measures in the short and medium term. These measures will in turn be the basis of the quality leap required for the city to take advantage of attractive metro stations in the long run. The proposed should bring forth both practical suggestions, but also potential solutions for architects and planners; increase the perception of future subway stations as attractive and modern as well as benefit a high level of experience value in the metro station environment.   However, there is much work that remains and that will require a more detailed analysis in the future, especially as regards the applicability of the proposed actions as well as other solutions that may emerge during the course of future studies. The current report should therefore serve as background material and inspiration for this ongoing work.
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Rixen, Martin [Verfasser], Jürgen [Akademischer Betreuer] Weigand, and Markus [Akademischer Betreuer] Reisinger. "Agent-based simulation of regulatory interventions to promote the diffusion of Smart Metering in Germany / Martin Rixen. Betreuer: Jürgen Weigand ; Markus Reisinger." Vallendar : WHU - Otto Beisheim School of Management, 2013. http://d-nb.info/1031742468/34.

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Calvio, Alessandro. "Infrastrutture e Soluzioni Geo-spaziali per la Gestione di Interventi Urbani basato su Apache Spark." Master's thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2021. http://amslaurea.unibo.it/22901/.

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Nel corso degli ultimi tempi il progresso tecnologico e il fenomeno dei Big Data hanno permesso di accedere ad una grandissima mole di dati, favorendo la creazione di servizi per migliorare i bisogni delle persone. Come afferma Tobler nella prima legge della geografia “Ogni cosa è correlata a qualsiasi altra, ma le cose vicine sono più relazionate di quelle lontane”; in tale contesto i dati geografici acquisiscono un’importanza quanto mai grande grazie alla possibilità di riuscire ad associare ogni informazione ad un punto sulla terra e capire le relazioni che vi intercorrono. Questo è estremamente vero nell’ambito smart city e urban planning dove i dati forniti da smartphone, dispositivi indossabili e sensoristica permettono di avere in tempo reale una panoramica di quello che succede all’interno di una città, e di poter pianificare offerte e servizi conseguentemente tenendo in conto le esigenze dei cittadini. La tesi presentata nel documento si colloca in uno scenario di questo tipo, inserendosi all’interno di un progetto più ampio chiamato Interactive Planning Platform fOr city District Adaptive Manteinance Operations (IPPODAMO), mirato alla costruzione di un sistema di pianificazione dinamico-adattivo dei lavori urbani da effettuare nell’area di Bologna. Lo scopo è duplice: (i) la creazione di un architettura che possa, in tempi rapidi, elaborare un numero elevato di dati geografici provenienti da sorgenti diverse, capendo come questi siano integrabili per creare il sistema descritto e (ii) lo sviluppo di un prototipo di un algoritmo di pianificazione che, sulla base dell’andamento del traffico in una certa zona, sia in grado di fornire gli istanti di tempo migliori per posizionare un lavoro. Durante il lavoro verrà posta enfasi sia sulle operazioni che è possibile fare con dataset geografici per estrarre informazioni, ma anche sulle configurazioni che un’architettura complessa come questa deve possedere per soddisfare requisiti di affidabilità e velocità.
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Books on the topic "Smart intervention"

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Making RTI work: How smart schools are reforming education through schoolwide response-to-intervention. San Francisco, Calif: Jossey-Bass, 2009.

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Sailor, Wayne. Making RTI work: How smart schools are reforming education through schoolwide response-to-intervention. San Francisco, Calif: Jossey-Bass, 2009.

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Sailor, Wayne. Making RTI work: How smart schools are reforming education through schoolwide response-to-intervention. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2009.

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Food rebels, guerilla gardeners, and smart-cookin' mamas: fighting back in an age of industrial agriculture. Boston, Mass: Beacon Press, 2010.

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Smart parenting: A guide to child assessment and therapeutic interventions. Fargo, ND: DCC Pub., 1996.

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Nuvolati, Giampaolo, ed. Sviluppo urbano e politiche per la qualità della vita. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-6453-736-8.

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La società attuale appare sempre più vulnerabile, incerta, complessa e ambigua ed in questo contesto aumenta la necessità di creare efficienti ed efficaci ecosistemi per la promozione locale della qualità della vita e dell’innovazione sociale. Il volume propone un excursus delle principali pratiche e politiche innovative che stanno accompagnando lo sviluppo urbano. Ogni saggio approfondisce un ambito di interesse – qualità della vita, innovazione sociale e sharing economy, smart city, mobilità urbana, nuovi luoghi del lavoro, abitare condiviso, eHealth, sicurezza urbana, giovani e turismo, food policy, innovazione didattica e amministrazione condivisa – offrendo una panoramica di riferimento per lo studio, la progettazione e l’implementazione di nuove strategie di intervento e politiche pubbliche. Il testo è rivolto a studenti, docenti, operatori che lavorano a vario livello in settori del sociale.
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Sailor, Wayne. Making RTI Work: How Smart Schools Are Reforming Education Through Schoolwide Response-To-Intervention. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2009.

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Sailor, Wayne. Making RTI Work: How Smart Schools Are Reforming Education Through Schoolwide Response-To-Intervention. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2009.

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Sailor, Wayne. Making RTI Work: How Smart Schools Are Reforming Education Through Schoolwide Response-To-Intervention. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2009.

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Buitelaar, Tom, and Richard Ponzio. Mobilizing Smart Coalitions and Negotiating Global Governance Reform. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198805373.003.0018.

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This chapter examines global governance reform strategies based on “smart coalitions” that include all parties with relevant assets to contribute. It analyzes and draws lessons from historical reform efforts, first, those undertaken by three international commissions: the Commission on Global Governance (1995), the International Commission for Intervention and State Sovereignty (2001), and the High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenges, and Change (2004). It then scrutinizes the factors contributing to the success of two recent global governance reform coalitions: the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (1997) and the International Criminal Court (1998). Analysis shows that reform strategies based on mutual recognition of the strengths and weaknesses of the various partners involved, and with active and sustained implementation strategies, have had the greatest success.
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Book chapters on the topic "Smart intervention"

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Akhilesh, K. B., and Kavitha Sooda. "A Study on Impact of Technology Intervention in the Field of Agriculture in India." In Smart Technologies, 373–85. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-7139-4_28.

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Zhang, Mi, and Christopher C. Yang. "The Effectiveness of Smoking Cessation Intervention on Facebook: A Preliminary Study of Posts and Users." In Smart Health, 7–17. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-39844-5_2.

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Li, Chunxiao, Bin Gu, and Chenhui Guo. "Strategic Behavior in Mobile Behavioral Intervention Platforms: Evidence from a Field Quasi-experiment on a Health Management App." In Smart Health, 130–41. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-03649-2_13.

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Jadhav, Sachin Shivaji, Pratul Ch Kalita, and Amarendra Kumar Das. "Design Management Intervention in Product–Service System of Water Supply." In Smart Innovation, Systems and Technologies, 185–96. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-5977-4_16.

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Brzeczko, Albert W., Randal P. Goldberg, Russell H. Taylor, and Peter Evans. "Smart Alignment Tool for Knee MosaicPlasty Surgery." In Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted Intervention – MICCAI 2001, 599–605. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-45468-3_72.

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Aranki, Daniel, Gregorij Kurillo, and Ruzena Bajcsy. "Smartphone Based Real-Time Health Monitoring and Intervention." In Handbook of Large-Scale Distributed Computing in Smart Healthcare, 473–514. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-58280-1_18.

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Kundu, Amar, Lavanya Bachwal, Anshul Patle, Priyanka Rawal, and Gaur G. Ray. "An Ergonomic Assessment and Design Intervention on Mud-Transfer Activity in Brick-Making Industry, India." In Smart Innovation, Systems and Technologies, 505–17. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-5974-3_44.

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Santos, Lúcio Agostinho Barreiros, and Maria Manuela Martins Saraiva Sarmento Coelho. "The Military Contract Service Model of the Portuguese Armed Forces. Critical Review and Intervention Measures." In Smart Innovation, Systems and Technologies, 195–207. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78605-6_16.

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Tao, Liancheng, Qibo Sun, Jinglin Li, Ao Zhou, and Shangguang Wang. "Task Planning with Manual Intervention Using Improved JSHOP2 Planner." In Internet of Vehicles. Technologies and Services Toward Smart Cities, 47–55. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-38651-1_5.

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Med Boudiaf, Saouane, and Zeghichi Sarra. "Study the Intervention on Oued El Harrach to Eliminate Pollution Using Urban Solutions and Sustainable Development." In Resilient and Responsible Smart Cities, 255–68. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-63567-1_22.

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Conference papers on the topic "Smart intervention"

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Pecherkova, Pavla, and Ivan Nagy. "Logistic regression with expert intervention." In 2016 Smart Cities Symposium Prague (SCSP). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/scsp.2016.7501032.

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McGurk, Mark, Gerald Heisig, Joe P. DeGeare, and Timothy Ellzey. "Innovative Systems Approach Enables Smart Intervention Solutions." In IADC/SPE Drilling Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/99121-ms.

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McNicol, James Michael, Mark McGurk, Gerald Heisig, and Brian A. Donadieu. "Smart Tool System Boosts Performance of Intervention Operations." In SPE Middle East Oil and Gas Show and Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/105242-ms.

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Dobre, R. A., and A. E. Marcu. "Practical Method for Emergency Intervention in Smart Cities." In 2018 IEEE 24th International Symposium for Design and Technology in Electronic Packaging (SIITME). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/siitme.2018.8599247.

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Chen, Yanfei, Matthew M. Barry, Mahdis Shayan, Brian T. Jankowitz, Xinjie Duan, Anne M. Robertson, Minking K. Chyu, and Youngjae Chun. "Smart guidewires for smooth navigation in neurovascular intervention." In SPIE Smart Structures and Materials + Nondestructive Evaluation and Health Monitoring, edited by Kevin M. Farinholt and Steven F. Griffin. SPIE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2084261.

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Park, Jinho, Hyoun-Joo Kim, and Woo-Hyoung Lee. "A Quantitative Analysis on Institutional Intervention Effect into Urban Transition." In Green and Smart Technology 2016. Science & Engineering Research Support soCiety, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.14257/astl.2016.140.16.

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Melhim, Loai Kayed B., Mahdi Jemmali, and Mafawez Alharbi. "Intelligent Real-time Intervention System Applied in Smart City." In 2018 21st Saudi Computer Society National Computer Conference (NCC). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ncg.2018.8593047.

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Mcnerlin, Brandon, Daniel Ndzi Shirmboh, Jim W. Spearman, and Colin John Price-Smith. "Smart Well Re-Entry and Intervention in Offshore Angola." In SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/135190-ms.

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Schmitter-Edgecombe, Maureen. "Clinical translation: Smart technologies for health assessment and intervention." In 2015 IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communication Workshops (PerCom Workshops). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/percomw.2015.7134057.

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Kumar, Devesh, and Naran Pindoriya. "A Review on 5G Technological Intervention in Smart Grid." In 2020 21st National Power Systems Conference (NPSC). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/npsc49263.2020.9331759.

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Reports on the topic "Smart intervention"

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Gupte, Jaideep, Sarath MG Babu, Debjani Ghosh, Eric Kasper, and Priyanka Mehra. Smart Cities and COVID-19: Implications for Data Ecosystems from Lessons Learned in India. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/sshap.2021.034.

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This brief distils best data practice recommendations through consideration of key issues involved in the use of technology for surveillance, fact-checking and coordinated control during crisis or emergency response in resource constrained urban contexts. We draw lessons from how data enabled technologies were used in urban COVID-19 response, as well as how standard implementation procedures were affected by the pandemic. Disease control is a long-standing consideration in building smart city architecture, while humanitarian actions are increasingly digitised. However, there are competing city visions being employed in COVID-19 response. This is symptomatic of a broader range of tech-based responses in other humanitarian contexts. These visions range from aspirations for technology driven, centralised and surveillance oriented urban regimes, to ‘frugal innovations’ by firms, consumers and city governments. Data ecosystems are not immune from gendered- and socio-political discrimination, and technology-based interventions can worsen existing inequalities, particularly in emergencies. Technology driven public health (PH) interventions thus raise concerns about 1) what types of technologies are appropriate, 2) whether they produce inclusive outcomes for economically and socially disadvantaged urban residents and 3) the balance between surveillance and control on one hand, and privacy and citizen autonomy on the other.
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Soethoudt, J. M., J. Broeze, and H. B. Axmann. The impact of mechanization in smallholder rice production in Nigeria : promising business cases for rice smallholders for income increasing and climate smart interventions. Wageningen: Wageningen Food & Biobased Research, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18174/550445.

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Safe Motherhood Applied Research and Training (SMART) Report 2: The interventions. Population Council, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh15.1032.

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