Michael Knop
University of Siegen
13 Papers
3 Citations
Michael Knop is an academic researcher from University of Siegen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Telemedicine & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Human Factors and Technological Characteristics Influencing the Interaction of Medical Professionals With Artificial Intelligence–Enabled Clinical Decision Support Systems: Literature Review
TL;DR: The technological characteristics and human factors that appear to have an essential effect on the collaboration of medical professionals and AI-enabled CDSSs are identified, namely, training data quality, performance, explainability, adaptability, medical expertise, technological expertise, personality, cognitive biases, and trust.
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Investigating the Use of Telemedicine for Digitally Mediated Delegation in Team-Based Primary Care: Mixed Methods Study.
TL;DR: In this article, a combination of 19 individual and group interviews with 12 GPs and 14 MAs, seeking to identify relevant technologies for delegation purposes as well as stakeholders' perceptions of their effectiveness, a web-based survey was conducted asking the interviewees to order identified technologies based on their assessed applicability in multi-actor patient care.
Agency and Body Ownership in Immersive Virtual Reality Environments: A Laboratory Study
Henrik Freude,Caroline Ressing,Marius Müller,Bjoern Niehaves,Michael Knop +4 more
- 07 Jan 2020
TL;DR: A positive significant effect of agency but no effect of body ownership on immersion is found in a laboratory study with a self-developed VR environment.
The impact of digital technology use on nurses' professional identity and relations of power: a literature review.
Michael Knop,Marius Mueller,Stephanie Kaiser,Christian Rester +3 more
TL;DR: A review of how the use of digital technologies in clinical nursing affects nurses' professional identity and the relations of power within clinical environments revealed relevant effects of digital technologies on nurses' professional identity and power relations.
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