Lead Section
editHealth sousveillance is the use of wearable health devices that can accumulate sensory data around the individual wearing the devices. Health sousveillance is derived from sousveillance, which was coined by Steve Mann. Sousveillance, in broad terms, is a type of monitoring that allows individuals to use surveillance techniques to keep authorities in check. In heath, sousveillance provides individuals who wear health devices to accumulate data from their visual and auditory devices. The information in their wearable health devices can ensure authorities do not overstep their boundaries or commit unjust activities. 73.170.117.227 (talk) 05:53, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
Planned Contribution to My Article
editI hope to provide an overview of Sousveillance[1] in Health devices, something that has not been discussed yet. Health devices can accumulate data, which is not approved by the user for dissemination. It is relevant but not synonymous with Health Tracking or Surveillance, so I hope to make this distinction in the page A4j023e11 (talk) 06:29, 13 October 2017 (UTC)
Biblography
edit1. Shull, P. B., Jirattigalachote, W., Hunt, M. A., Cutkosky, M. R., & Delp, S. L. 2014. “Review: Quantified self and human movement: A review on the clinical impact of wearable sensing and feedback for gait analysis and intervention.” Gait & Posture 40:11-19.
2. Adam, S. 2013. “Post-panoptic surveillance through healthcare rating sites: Who's watching whom?” Information Community & Society. 16(2):215-235.
3. Shakhakarmi, N. 2015. “Next Generation Wearable Devices: Smart Health Monitoring Device and Smart Sousveillance Hat using Device to Device (D2D) Communications in LTE Assisted Networks.” WSEAS Transactions On Communications 14:241-255.
4. Abootalebi, H. (2017). “The Omnipresence of Television and the Ascendancy of Surveillance/Sousveillance in Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit” 451. K@Ta, 19(1):8-14.
5. Cardullo, P. (2014). “Sniffing the city: issues of sousveillance in inner city London.” Visual Studies 29(3):285-293.
6. Fernback, J. 2013. “Sousveillance: Communities of resistance to the surveillance environment.” Telematics and Informatics 30(1): 11-21.
7. Fisher, P., Freshwater, D., Fisher, P., & Walsh, E. 2015. “Revisiting the Panopticon: professional regulation, surveillance and sousveillance.” Nursing Inquiry 22(1):3-12.
8. Garrido, M. V. 2015. “Contesting a Biopolitics of Information and Communications: The Importance of Truth and Sousveillance After Snowden.” Surveillance & Society 13(2):153-167.
9. Kang, J., Shilton, K., Estrin, D., Burke, J., & Hansen, M. 2012. “Self-Surveillance Privacy.” Iowa Law Review 97(3):809-847.
10. Michael, K. 2015. “Sousveillance: implications for privacy, security, trust, and the law.” IEEE Consumer Electronics Magazine 4(2):92-94.
11. Ganascia, J. 2010. “The generalized sousveillance society.” Social Science Information 49(3):489-507.
12. Cohen, J. E. 2010. “The Inverse Relationship between Secrecy and Privacy.” Social Research 77(3):883-898.
13. Timan, T., Albrechtslund, A. 2015. “Surveillance, Self and Smartphones: Tracking Practices in the Nightlife.” Science & Engineering Ethics 21(4):1-18
14. Bossewitch, J., & Sinnreich, A. “The end of forgetting: Strategic agency beyond the panopticon.” New Media & Society 15(2):224-242.
15. Grommé, F. (2016). “Provocation: Technology, resistance and surveillance in public space.” Environment & Planning D: Society & Space 34(6):1007-1024.
16. Terry, N. P. 2017. “Will the Internet of things transform healthcare?” Vanderbilt Journal Of Entertainment And Technology Law (2):327-352.
17. Caron, D. J., & Brown, R. 2011. “The Documentary Moment in the Digital Age: Establishing New Value Propositions for Public Memory.” Archivaria (71):1-20.
18. Mann, S. 2016. “Surveillance (Oversight), Sousveillance (Undersight), and Metaveillance (Seeing Sight Itself).” IEEE (1):1408-1417.
19. Shilton, K. 2012. “Participatory personal data: An emerging research challenge for the information sciences.” Journal Of The American Society For Information Science & Technology 63(10):1905-1915.
20. Lupton, D. 2016. The diverse domains of quantified selves: self-tracking modes and dataveillance. Economy & Society 45(1):101-122.
21. Sharon, T. 2017. “Self-Tracking for Health and the Quantified Self: Re-Articulating Autonomy, Solidarity, and Authenticity in an Age of Personalized Healthcare.” Philosophy & Technology 30(1), 93-121.
22. Ortega Hinojosa, A. M., Davies, M. M., Jarjour, S., Burnett, R. T., Mann, J. K., Hughes, E., & ... Jerrett, M. 2014. “Developing small-area predictions for smoking and obesity prevalence in the United States for use in Environmental Public Health Tracking.” Environmental Research 134:435-452.
23. Latshaw, M. W., Degeberg, R., Patel, S. S., Rhodes, B., King, E., Chaudhuri, S., & Nassif, J. 2017. “Advancing environmental health surveillance in the US through a national human biomonitoring network.” International Journal Of Hygiene And Environmental Health 220(Part A):98-121 A4j023e11 (talk) 06:29, 13 October 2017 (UTC)
References
editThis is a user sandbox of A4j023e11. You can use it for testing or practicing edits. This is not the sandbox where you should draft your assigned article for a dashboard.wikiedu.org course. To find the right sandbox for your assignment, visit your Dashboard course page and follow the Sandbox Draft link for your assigned article in the My Articles section. |
- ^ "Sousveillance". Wikipedia. 2017-10-11.