Wearable devices and healthcare: Data sharing and privacy
暂无分享,去创建一个
Syagnik Banerjee | Thomas Hemphill | Phil Longstreet | Syagnik Banerjee | Phil Longstreet | Thomas Hemphill
[1] Nancy E. Langston,et al. Toxic Bodies: Hormone Disruptors and the Legacy of DES , 2010 .
[2] H. Nissenbaum. Privacy as contextual integrity , 2004 .
[3] Kristen L. Walker. Surrendering Information through the Looking Glass: Transparency, Trust, and Protection , 2016 .
[4] Rainer Böhme,et al. Trained to accept?: a field experiment on consent dialogs , 2010, CHI.
[5] Fred H. Cate,et al. Notice and consent in a world of Big Data , 2013 .
[6] Anil K. Gupta,et al. Industry Self-Regulation: An Economic, Organizational, and Political Analysis , 1983 .
[7] Gabrielle Addonizio. The Privacy Risks Surrounding Consumer Health and Fitness Apps, Associated Wearable Devices, and HIPAA’s Limitations , 2016 .
[8] Gregory S. Nelson,et al. Practical Implications of Sharing Data: A Primer on Data Privacy, Anonymization, and De-Identification , 2015 .
[9] Dieter Hayn,et al. The Internet of Things for Ambient Assisted Living , 2010, 2010 Seventh International Conference on Information Technology: New Generations.
[10] Kevin M. Stine,et al. Introductory Resource Guide for Implementing the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Security Rule [revision 1] , 2005 .
[11] Helen Nissenbaum,et al. Biosensing in context: Health privacy in a connected world , 2016 .
[12] Julian Agyeman,et al. Cultivating Food Justice: Race, Class, and Sustainability , 2011 .
[13] Fred H. Cate. Protecting Privacy in Health Research: The Limits of Individual Choice , 2010 .
[14] L. Nash,et al. Inescapable Ecologies: A History of Environment, Disease, and Knowledge , 2006 .
[15] Charlotte Biltekoff,et al. The Terror Within: Obesity in Post 9/11 U.S. Life , 2007 .
[16] David A. Garvin,et al. Can Industry Self-Regulation Work? , 1983 .