Search

Your search keyword '"Camilla Malinowsky"' showing total 56 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Camilla Malinowsky" Remove constraint Author: "Camilla Malinowsky"
56 results on '"Camilla Malinowsky"'

Search Results

1. Associations between community participation and types of places visited among persons living with and without dementia: risks perception and socio-demographic aspects

2. Perceived risks, concession travel pass access and everyday technology use for out-of-home participation: cross-sectional interviews among older people in the UK

3. A narrative synthesis systematic review of digital self-monitoring interventions for middle-aged and older adults

4. Validation of the Everyday Technology Use Questionnaire in a Japanese context

6. Bridging gaps in the design and implementation of socially assistive technologies for dementia care: the role of occupational therapy

7. Accessing public space in the digital society: relationship between the use of everyday technology and places visited outside the home after acquired brain injury

8. Enacting citizenship through participation in a technological society: a longitudinal three-year study among people with dementia in Sweden

9. The use of everyday technology; a comparison of older persons with cognitive impairments’ self-reports and their proxies’ reports

10. Kaleidoscopic associations between life outside home and the technological environment that shape occupational injustice as revealed through cross-sectional statistical modelling

11. Does the purpose matter? A comparison of everyday information and communication technologies between eHealth use and general use as perceived by older adults with cognitive impairment

12. Associations between perceived participation outside home and types of places visited among persons living with and without dementia: risks perception and socio-demographic aspects

13. Out-of-home participation among people living with dementia : A study in four countries

14. The Symptom Checklist: Frequency and Severity Scale – translation and psychometric properties of the Swedish version

15. Places visited for activities outside the home after stroke: Relationship with the severity of disability

16. Patterns of participation: Facilitating and hindering aspects related to places for activities outside the home after stroke

17. Measurement of older adults’ performance in digital technology-mediated occupations and management of digital technology

18. Smartphone-Based Experience Sampling in People With Mild Cognitive Impairment

19. Social Participation in Relation to Technology Use and Social Deprivation: A Mixed Methods Study Among Older People with and without Dementia

20. Smartphone-Based Experience Sampling in People With Mild Cognitive Impairment: Feasibility and Usability Study (Preprint)

21. Gender and diagnostic impact on everyday technology use: a differential item functioning (DIF) analysis of the Everyday Technology Use Questionnaire (ETUQ)

22. Everyday technology use among older adults in Sweden and Japan: A comparative study

23. Test-retest reliability of the short version of the everyday technology use questionnaire (S-ETUQ)

24. The perceived challenge of everyday technologies in Sweden, the United States and England: Exploring differential item functioning in the everyday technology use questionnaire

25. A narrative synthesis systematic review of digital self-monitoring interventions for middle-aged and older adults

26. TD‐P‐41: MAPPING PARTICIPATION IN RELATION TO ACCESS AND THE USE OF EVERYDAY TECHNOLOGY AMONG OLDER PEOPLE WITH AND WITHOUT DEMENTIA IN THE U.K

27. Everyday technologies and public space participation among people with and without dementia

28. Do you observe what I perceive? The relationship between two perspectives on the ability of people with cognitive impairments to use everyday technology

29. Can the everyday technology use questionnaire predict overall functional level among older adults with mild cognitive impairment or mild-stage alzheimer's disease? - a pilot study

30. 343 - Best Practice Guidance on Human Interaction with Technology in Dementia – Recommendations from the INDUCT Network

31. Interventions aimed at improving the ability to use everyday technology in work after brain injury

32. Changes in the technological landscape over time: Relevance and difficulty levels of everyday technologies as perceived by older adults with and without cognitive impairment

33. The match between everyday technology in public space and the ability of working-age people with acquired brain injury to use it

34. Older adults' experiences of daily life occupations as everyday technology changes

35. Test-retest and inter-rater reliability of the Danish version of the management of everyday technology assessment for use with older adults with and without COPD

36. Skill clusters of ability to manage everyday technology among people with and without cognitive impairment, dementia and acquired brain injury

37. Stability of person ability measures in people with acquired brain injury in the use of everyday technology: the test–retest reliability of the Management of Everyday Technology Assessment (META)

38. EVERYDAY TECHNOLOGY: A USEFUL SERVANT BUT DANGEROUS MASTER FOR PARTICIPATION IN SOCIETY?

39. P2-609: MAPPING PARTICIPATION IN RELATION TO ACCESS AND THE USE OF EVERYDAY TECHNOLOGY, AMONG OLDER PEOPLE WITH AND WITHOUT DEMENTIA AND ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE IN THE UK

40. Using a screening tool to evaluate potential use of e-health services for older people with and without cognitive impairment

41. Everyday technologies' levels of difficulty when used by older adults with and without cognitive impairment – Comparison of self-perceived versus observed difficulty estimates

42. Are there differences in the use of everyday technology among persons with MCI, SCI and older adults without known cognitive impairment

43. A psychometric evaluation of the Swedish version of the Research Utilization Questionnaire using a Rasch measurement model

44. Psychometric evaluation of a new assessment of the ability to manage technology in everyday life

46. Changing everyday activities and technology use in mild cognitive impairment

47. Skill Clusters in Ability to Manage Everyday Technology Among Older People With and Without Cognitive Impairments

48. The association between perceived and observed ability to use everyday technology in people of working age with ABI

49. Associations between performance of activities of daily living and everyday technology use among older adults with mild stage Alzheimer’s disease or mild cognitive impairment

50. Ability to manage everyday technology after acquired brain injury

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources