Sunday, June 1, 2014

Resource Links


All Pictures, Links, Resource Information,  Infographics of this site; including the content belong to the owners of the materials, and are on this blog-site as reference resources for the purposes of educational resources only. All resources are the sole property of their rightful owner and not of this blog-site. Creative Commons with no revision is invoked for educational review and sharing.
This site, can be referenced for educational purposes only. This site may be revised as recommended, requested or at will.
Resource List

SCIENCE- Brilliant Doctor 
Google Glass Explorer
http://9to5google.com/tag/paul-szotek/

Dr. Paul Szotek

Dr. Paul Szotek is a surgeon in Indianapolis, Indiana. He is affiliated with multiple hospitals in the area, including Indiana University Health North Hospital and Indiana University Health University Hospital. He received his medical degree from Indiana University School of Medicine and has been in practice for 12 years.  He is one of 29 doctors at Indiana University Health North Hospital and one of 8 at Indiana University Health University Hospital who specialize in Surgery.

Dr. Szotek met with Google in March to discuss his software, called 1st Sight. He and other Glass-wearing surgeons recently founded a group — the International Society for Wearable Technology in Healthcare — that is holding its first meeting in Indianapolis in July.
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First Peer-reviewed study on Google Glass in pediatric surgery: an exploratory study.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24534776
 2014;12(4):281-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ijsu.2014.02.003. Epub 2014 Feb 15.

http://www.watch-society.com/about/board
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hf799LKU7TA

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ART-   Creative and Innovative Professionals
Bard Graduate College (BGC)
Waterweavers Exhibit - Google Glass Museum (docent) App
http://www.bgc.bard.edu/

Special Thanks to: 
GLASSNYC  and Community
Katy Kasmai
Zack Freedman
Han Vu

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University Educator and Google Glass Explorer- Brilliant Mind
Alexander Hayes
Inspire Centre/ University of Canberra, Australia
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfhVHi9gqg5TLDTvvpVbI89NI5EJirTw8
This series of recorded Google Hangouts is a record of my interaction with the Google Glass Explorers Community and other related contacts from industry, research and affiliated organisations. The intent of this research activity is to gain an understanding of the key motivations, experiences and understandings that these individuals gain from engaging with this emergent wearable technology

http://www.inspire.edu.au/
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Google Glass Explorer and Amazing Educator
Adam Winkle
EduGlasses
Collier County Public School district, FLA
Discovery Education STEM educator
 STEMVids and is the founding host for "Hangout of the Minds
http://eduglasses.com 
 INSPIRE Centre, University of Canberra as part of our #glassmeetups program and broader research activities.
http://www.inspire.edu.au/blog/
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Google Glass Explorer and  Amazing Educator, Glass Explorer
Courtney Pepe
http://www.edudemic.com/google-glass-experiment/
http://mrspepe.com/my-google-glass-experiment/


Courtney Pepe, a high school teacher in Middlesex County, New Jersey, is an Apple Distinguished Educator who frequently blogs about Augmented Reality and APP-smashing. She has taught every grade from kindergarten to 12th and is qualified to teach biology, chemistry, secondary math, secondary language arts, and social studies. In addition, Courtney has designed numerous PD workshops for her district and has presented at many conferences, including EdTech Teacher iPad Summits, Educon, ISTE, the Apple Distinguished Educator Institute, and more. She has also published two books about Augmented Reality that are available in the iBook Store.
Courtney has a BA from SUNY Buffalo, an M.S. from the University of Southern Maine, a Supervisors Certificate from Seton Hall University, and an additional 30+ credits in the sciences from Rutgers University. She is currently in a Masters of Administration program through Monmouth University and is quadruple certified in biology, social studies, elementary education, and special education.

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Writer -Amazing Twitter Story Winning Author and more Fiction Festival NYC


Rebecca Kemp
Rebecca was born in London and now lives on the west coast of Ireland. The juxtaposition of the two places has inspired much of her writing, as has spending periods of time in other countries such as China, USA and France. She has an American Literature degree from Sussex University and a Communications and Technology MA from Brunel University. 

http://rebeccakemp.com/pages/about.php
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JOURNALISM   Innovative Professors & Glass Explorers
University of Oregon
Tiffany Gallicano
http://journalism.uoregon.edu/news/google-glass-comes-sojc/


Robert Hernandez

USC Annenberg
http://annenberg.usc.edu/News%20and%20Events/News/130828journalismforum.aspx

http://www.scribblelive.com/google-glass-wearable-tech-and-the-future-of-digital-storytelling/



Thursday, May 22, 2014



GOOGLE GLASS - THE GLASS  PROJECT 2002





From the Beginning Glass was a P  O I N T    O F   V I E W  Device to record and take photos... 

It is maturing into much more ...
Videos of Early Glass

Monday, May 19, 2014


The Hashtag or the @ Symbol?

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Google Docs Add -on:
TWITTER CURATOR
in the Chrome Store





OPTION 1: TWITTER Curator Information

OPTION 2:  Tall Tweets 

to Extend your Tweets over 140 Characters


www.talltweets.com


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Journalism with New Media





 A NEW VIEW OF WRITING 


 EXPERIENCES USING SOCIAL MEDIA

AND WEARABLES     


                      Why Twitter?  

Over 500 million tweets a day…  


Twitter Fiction Festival 
 @TWFictionfest    #twitterfiction

                    
USING TWITTER in CREATIVE STORY TELLING...

Twitter Fictional Festival is a


 micro story told in 140 characters… 

www.twitterfictionfestival.com

27 authors, including a comedian Jim Gaffigan and novelist Alexander McCall Smith to share their stories online

Embedded image permalink
  • News, opinions, pictures, small talk, self promotion, and now the literacy uses of Twitter are emerging

  • 4 Days,  24 hours a day of online storytelling, in NYC  

  • Twitter teamed up with  publishing  Penguin Random House, and the Association of American Publishers. 
  • I chose an amazing Twitter story by an emerging author from England Rebecca Kemp  #REKemp1    

R.Kemp “won” a featured spot during this writing 

festival along slide of famous writings like RL Stine.

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Little Twitter Story


Student Assignment using an Infographic

                    


@pinkglassprince


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At the University of Oregon's School of

Journalism and Communication, Professor

Tiffany Gallicano is using Glass in the


classroom to help improve student


presentations.

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University Southern California

 

OK, Glass, it's time to change journalism.
That will be the collective mindset of students taking "Glass Journalism," a new course slated for the fall semester at the University of Southern California, where students will be tasked with thinking up new ways for journalists to tell stories using augmented reality and Google Glass.

 

Thursday, May 1, 2014

GlassNYC. BGC Waterweavers Glass Docent App


BGC WaterWeavers Exhibit  at 86th Street and 18th at the Bard Museum
Bard Graduate College 

Welcome Prologue
Dr. Elena Pinto Simon
Dean of Academic Administration and Student Affairs

A New Journey Using Google Glass


The Art Gallery Experience Art Through Google Glass!  

  1. Han Vu and Zack Freedman GLASS and Professional Developers                                               
  2. Teamed up with the Gallery at BGC and Glass NYC                                                                                            
  3. Created a modern art gallery/museum experience using the image recognition technology of Google Glass



Twitter
Show less

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Creative Collaborations in the Arts



Gallery Docent APP

April 28, 2014

The Art Gallery Experience Through Google Glass

Experience Art through Google Glass!  Han Vu and Zack Freedman have teamed up with the Gallery at BGC , Bard Graduate College, and Glass NYC to create a modern art gallery/museum experience using the image recognition technology of Google Glass.  
This creative experience was designed for the advancement of art education and is part of the not-for-profit activities of the BGC Gallery.

Katy Kasmai


Founder Xocracy, GlassNYC.co, and another project. Google.com/+KatyKasm­ai


Zack Freedman is a professional hardware hacker specializing in wearable technology. In 2011, Zack founded Voidstar Lab, the mercenary hardware hacker agency, to bring the rebel-genius ethos of the Maker movement to anyone with a visionary idea and a fat bankroll. He believes that by making wearable technology a critical part of daily life, humans will take the first steps to overcoming their biological quirks.






Han Vu is a Media Producer at the Bard Graduate Center, New York. He received his MA from Bard College in the History of Decorative Arts. Since 1998, he has been producing and designing interactive media for art exhibition in museums in North America and Europe. In those years, he has produced over 80 films and media projects spanning a variety of art subjects. In addition, he has spearheaded the use and implementation of digital media for museums and galleries for everyday workflow and archival solutions. Recently, he is working on new approaches for museum interpretations that aim to rethink and redefine what interpretations are and how they are presented.

Twitter accounts 

#waterweavers



Follow UP Educational Collaborations:

Curated Pictures from Waterweavers, using the ArtSite App for the Art Gallery Through Glass Exhibit and Twitter #roxannriskin

View the Main Gallery for the Through Google Glass Augmented Reality App pictures,
and reflections on the Event!

ARTSITE APP Used with Twitter- Create a Unique Participatory Collaboration for Discussion and Extending Learning











Creative Collaborations in Medicine

GOOGLE GLASS EYES the Wonders of Modern Medical Technology

                                                                                     

History was Made!!!

Dr. Rafael Grossmann is a trauma surgeon at Eastern Maine Medical Center in Bangor.

BOLD and CREATIVE
An innovator who pioneered teletrauma – a method of providing trauma care expertise using mobile technology, first using an iPod and later via smartphone.

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Dr. Paul SZOTECK--- 

Trauma Surgeon

Indianapolis INDIANA

Google Glass As A Teaching Tool

Szotek says the real potential he sees for Google Glass is in the classroom.
He says the Glass can help students see a surgery and learn how to do the procedure through the doctor’s perspective. He says using the Glass from a first-person perspective provides a view students haven’t seen before.
At IU Health Methodist Hospital, IU School of Medicine students learn in simulation rooms that feature medical equipment paired with mannequins.
With the Glass, Szotek says he is able to record a video of himself performing a procedure on a mannequin, then make that video available to students for a first-person experience.


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 SIM Man WEARS GLASS!

CPR, SURGERY, INJECTIONS, CENTRAL LINE PLACEMENTS,HEMATOLOGY & MORE!


Patient care 
See test results on the Google Glass screen then transmit the results to a tablet or laptop, so the patient can see them.
  • Reviewing patient test results 
  • Ordering tests or medications – A doctor or nurse working with a patient can contact the lab or pharmacy and send an order directly, without having to step away to use a computer or relaying the order through someone else.
  • Charting – Patient data or care information can be dictated and recorded by the Glass, instead of typed on a laptop.
  • Specialty services – Applications can provide step-by-step guidance for life support, cardiopulmonary resuscitation and protocols for high-stress code events. The Glass could provide information, hands-free, for situations that may come up rarely.
  • Communication between health care providersSurgery – A surgeon live-streaming an operation can provide an instant view of what she sees to other surgeons at a remote location for consultation.
  • Consulting specialists – A rural family doctor could live-stream a consultation with a patient to a specialist at another location. First responders at the scene of an accident communicate verbally and visually with hospital staff for advice on starting advanced care in the field.

Patients at Home

google glass 03Dr. Adam Robinson wears google glass at DeVos Children's Hospital Friday, January 17, 2014. (Chris Clark | MLive.com) 
Guiding patients, family  Special tools, a CPR APP, can provide instruction for family members caring for a loved one. Face-recognition software could help a person with dementia.

  • Taking medication – The Google Glass can provide medication reminders by showing a picture of the drug, the dose and timing. It can monitor compliance by using sensors to track head movement as a person takes a pill. It also can provide information on side effects and instructions such as whether to take the medication with food.
  • Appointments – The Glass can be programmed to provide appointment reminders, directions to the doctor’s office or hospital and a voice-activated way to call the office. 
  • Communication with the doctor – A patient discussing a skin rash or other concern with a doctor could use the Glass to provide a video or photo of what he sees.

“The ways Glass will be used in medicine will only be limited by our imaginations,” he said. “I feel so strongly it’s going to change things dramatically. It’s an incredible project.”

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But you probably already knew that: a November 2013 article in the American Journal of Emergency Medicine (AJEM) found that community emergency physicians spend 44 percent of their time interacting with EMRs and click up to 4,000 times in a 10-hour shift.


Slow Death by EMR or: How I Learned to Stop Clicking and Love Google Glass

Abstract 

Objective

We evaluate physician productivity using electronic medical records in a community hospital emergency department.

Methods

Physician time usage per hour was observed and tabulated in the categories of direct patient contact, data and order entry, interaction with colleagues, and review of test results and old records.

Results

The mean percentage of time spent on data entry was 43% (95% confidence interval, 39%-47%). The mean percentage of time spent in direct contact with patients was 28%. The pooled weighted average time allocations were 44% on data entry, 28% in direct patient care, 12% reviewing test results and records, 13% in discussion with colleagues, and 3% on other activities. Tabulation was made of the number of mouse clicks necessary for several common emergency department charting functions and for selected patient encounters. Total mouse clicks approach 4000 during a busy 10-hour shift.

Conclusion

Emergency department physicians spend significantly more time entering data into electronic medical records than on any other activity, including direct patient care. Improved efficiency in data entry would allow emergency physicians to devote more time to patient care, thus increasing hospital revenue.

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