Academic literature on the topic 'Self-surveillance'

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Journal articles on the topic "Self-surveillance"

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Yau, Nathan, and Jodi Schneider. "Self-Surveillance." Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 35, no. 5 (June 2009): 24–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bult.2009.1720350507.

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Frick, Laurie. "Self‐surveillance." EMBO reports 15, no. 3 (February 7, 2014): 218–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/embr.201438460.

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Willis, James, and Susan Silbey. "Self, Surveillance, and Society." Sociological Quarterly 43, no. 3 (June 2002): 439–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1533-8525.2002.tb00058.x.

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Witt, Katrina, and Jo Robinson. "Sentinel Surveillance for Self-Harm." Crisis 40, no. 1 (January 2019): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/0227-5910/a000583.

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Simon, Gail. "Self-supervision, surveillance and transgression." Journal of Family Therapy 32, no. 3 (July 14, 2010): 308–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6427.2010.00505.x.

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Schmid, Dorothee, and Christian Münz. "Immune Surveillance via Self Digestion." Autophagy 3, no. 2 (March 27, 2007): 133–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/auto.3591.

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Wolthers, Louise. "Self-Surveillance and Virtual safety." Photographies 6, no. 1 (March 2013): 169–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17540763.2013.788852.

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Nagel, Saskia K., and Hartmut Remmers. "Self-Perception and Self-Determination in Surveillance Conditions." American Journal of Bioethics 12, no. 9 (September 2012): 53–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15265161.2012.699146.

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Lucherini, Mark. "Performing Diabetes: Surveillance and Self-Management." Surveillance & Society 14, no. 2 (September 21, 2016): 259–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/ss.v14i2.5996.

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Sustaining the diabetic body involves visible practices of expert self-management: injecting insulin and testing blood sugar levels. Drawing form qualitative interviews I consider how people with diabetes manage the visibility of these practices relative to space. For many, the practices of diabetes are configured as ‘to be hidden’, and micro-spatial strategies are frequently deployed to conceal injections and tests from possible observing others. Diabetes then, is often a performance, one influenced by the performativity in space and place in which bodies are felt to be monitored. People with diabetes internalise self-disciplinary practices – keeping their diabetes discreet – especially in public. In this paper I contend that because of this performed discretion of diabetes self-management practices, there is a barrier to knowing diabetic bodies and lifeworlds. I suggest that, through increasing awareness of this subtle performance and surveillance, people with diabetes may feel less restricted in their self-management when in public space.
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FISHER, SEYMOUR, STEPHEN G. BRYANT, and THOMAS A. KENT. "Postmarketing Surveillance by Patient Self-Monitoring." Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology 13, no. 4 (August 1993): 235???242. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00004714-199308000-00002.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Self-surveillance"

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Lundkvist, Johanna, and Anna-Klara Palmér. "Theater practice and its association with body appreciation and self-surveillance among women." Thesis, Umeå universitet, Institutionen för psykologi, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-167273.

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Recently, researchers have gained an increased interest in examining activities that promote a more positive body image among women. Some activities such as yoga and dance have proven to be positively associated with body appreciation, both directly and through reduced self-surveillance. Theater practice has been shown to be beneficial for several facets of mental health; however, until now no research has been conducted on its’ association with body appreciation or self-surveillance. The present study aimed to examine the relationship between theater practice and body appreciation, controlling for BMI. The study also investigated the relationship between theater practice and self-surveillance, and if self-surveillance works as a mediator between theater practice and body appreciation. Participants of 231 women aged 18-40 years (M = 27.65, SD = 5.76) answered a questionnaire on theater practice, body appreciation and self-surveillance. Path analysis revealed that theater practice had no relation to body appreciation or self-surveillance when controlling for BMI. Self-surveillance and BMI were, however, negatively associated with body appreciation. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
Den senaste tiden har forskare fått ett ökat intresse för att undersöka aktiviteter som främjar en mer positiv kroppsuppfattning hos kvinnor. En del aktiviteter såsom yoga och dans har visat sig vara positivt korrelerade med kroppsuppskattning, både direkt och genom minskad självövervakning. Teaterutövande har visat sig främja olika aspekter av mental hälsa, men hittills har ingen forskning gjorts om dess samband med kroppsuppskattning eller självövervakning. Denna studie syftade till att undersöka sambandet mellan teaterutövande och kroppsuppskattning, samt kontrollera för BMI. Studien undersökte också sambandet mellan teaterutövande och självövervakning, samt om självövervakning fungerar som en mediator mellan teaterutövande och kroppsuppskattning. Deltagare bestående av 231 kvinnor i åldrarna 18–40 år (M = 27,65, SD = 5,76) svarade på frågeformulär om teaterutövande, kroppsuppskattning och självövervakning. Stiganalys visade att teaterutövande inte hade något samband till kroppsuppskattning eller självövervakning vid kontroll av BMI. Självövervakning och BMI var emellertid negativt korrelerade med kroppsuppskattning. Teoretiska och praktiska implikationer diskuteras.
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Hubbard, Ruth. "Self beyond self/lost in practice : surveillance, appearance and posthuman possibilities for critical selfhood in children's services in England." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10871/18821.

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The selfhood of social professionals in children’s services is under-researched, and where the primary focus is on practice ‘outcomes’. Informed by a critical social policy frame this thesis focuses on the selfhood of social professionals in children’s services to ask how it might, or might not, be possible to think, and do, self differently. I bring into play a critical posthumanist (non-sovereign) becoming self alongside, and in relation to, the other ‘allowed’ or ‘prescribed’ selves of neo-liberalism, professional practice and (critical) social policy itself. Utilising theoretical resources, in particular from Arendt, Deleuze and Guattari, and Foucault, I characterise this as thinking with both ‘surveillance’ and ‘appearance’, and self as an explicitly political project. In a post-structural frame I pursue a post-methodological rhizomatic and cartographic methodology that aims to open up proliferations in thinking and knowledge rather than foreclose it to one clear answer, and where I also draw on a small number of interviews with experienced professionals and managers in children’s services. A rhizomatic figure of thought involves irreducible and multiple relations that are imbricated on the surface; it is a flattened picture where theory, data, researcher, participants and analysis are not separate, where all connections are part of an overall picture, and in movement. I argue that social professionals occupy a deeply striated landscape for being/knowing/practising, a particular ontological grid that tethers their selfhood to the pre-existing, and to intensifications in a neo-liberal project. Here, ‘rearranging the chairs’ becomes more of the same, where the sovereign humanist subject is “a normative frame and an institutionalised practice” (Braidotti, 2013, p.30). In thinking otherwise, beyond traditional critical theory, a posthuman lens draws attention to the ways in which we might be/live both inside and outside of the already existing and where we become with others, human and non-human in shifting assemblages. However, the self prescribed and prefigured in dominant discourses constitute the historical preconditions from which experiments in self, and other possibilities may emerge. Practices of de-familiarisation, a radical, non-linear relationality, and a hermeneutics of situation are suggested as strategies for thinking forward, for appearance, and a self beyond self.
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SANTOS, LEANDRO DE PAULA. "I PUBLISH, THEREFORE I AM: NARRATIVES OF SELF AND SHARED SURVEILLANCE ON WEB 2.0." PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO, 2009. http://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/Busca_etds.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=16461@1.

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COORDENAÇÃO DE APERFEIÇOAMENTO DO PESSOAL DE ENSINO SUPERIOR
Este ensaio investiga como as redes sociais popularizadas na internet nos últimos anos têm consistido em práticas de automodelagem identitária para seus usuários. Escolhendo por recorte o uso que a juventude brasileira faz do website Orkut, o estudo problematiza a categoria identidade pelo viés das narrativas autorreferenciadas. Para tanto, parte-se da hipótese de que as narrativas de si, embora esboçadas em diferentes momentos da história ocidental, ganham vulto no nascimento do período moderno, quando se estabelecem conceitos como os de individualidade e intimidade. Examinados os antecedentes desse processo, são apresentadas consequências da comunicação mediada por computador no cotidiano do indivíduo comum a partir da última década. As redes sociais são então analisadas através do apelo à performance e singularização identitária de seus usuários. A dissertação aborda como a noção de participação e exposição de si, que está na base das iniciativas de compartilhamento de conteúdo da Web 2.0, demarca tensões para as noções de público e privado, fomentando novos comportamentos sociais, valores de alteridade e práticas de vigilância distribuída no ambiente digital. Metodologicamente, o estudo se utilizou de observação participante, análise de dados e de entrevistas com jovens usuários brasileiros de redes sociais.
The essay takes a deep look into how online social networking, made popular on the internet over the last years, arouses practices of identity selfconstruction by its users. Focusing on the use of Orkut website, mostly by Brazilian teenagers and young adults, this study discusses the notion of identity through the history of self-referred narratives. In this aim, it takes the hypothesis that, although narratives of the self were outlined in different periods in Western history, they ascended in the emerging of modern times - when the ideas of individuality and intimacy appeared. After considering these prior facts, this essay presents the consequences of computer-mediated communication in everyday life during the last decade. Then, online social networking is analysed through its appeals to identity performance and customization. The research deals with how participation and exhibition – two factors which plot the platforms of Web 2.0 - set a tension between the notions of public and private, as well as encourage new social behaviours, values of alterity and shared practices of surveillance in the digital context. The research method was based on participant observation, information analysis and interviews with Brazilian young users of online social networking.
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Brax, Nicolas. "Self-adaptive multi-agent systems for aided decision-making : an application to maritime surveillance." Toulouse 3, 2013. http://thesesups.ups-tlse.fr/2196/.

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L'activité maritime s'est fortement développée ces dernières années et sert de support à de nombreuses activités illicites. Il est devenu nécessaire que les organismes impliqués dans la surveillance maritime disposent de systèmes efficaces pour les aider à identifier ces activités illicites. Les Systèmes de Surveillance Maritime doivent observer de manière efficace un espace maritime large, à identifier des anomalies de comportement des navires évoluant dans l'espace en question, et à déclencher des alertes documentées si ces anomalies amènent à penser que les navires ont un comportement suspect. Nous proposons un modèle générique de système multi-agents, que nous appelons MAS4AT, capable de remplir deux des différents rôles d'un système de surveillance : la représentation numérique des comportements des entités surveillées et des mécanismes d'apprentissage pour une meilleure efficacité. MAS4AT est intégré au système I2C
The maritime activity has widely grow in the last few years and is the witness of several illegal activities. It has become necessary that the organizations involved in the maritime surveillance possess efficient systems to help them in their identification. The maritime surveillance systems must observe a wide maritime area, identify the anomalies in the behaviours of the monitored ships et trigger alerts when these anomalies leads to a suspicious behavior. We propose a generic agent model, called MAS4AT, able to fulfil two main roles of a surveillance system: the numerical representation of the behaviours of the monitored entities and learning mechanisms for a better efficiency. MAS4AT is integrated in the system I2C
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Palaniappan, Ravishankar. "A SELF-ORGANIZING HYBRID SENSOR SYSTEM WITH DISTRIBUTED DATA FUSION FOR INTRUDER TRACKING AND SURVEILLANCE." Doctoral diss., University of Central Florida, 2010. http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETD/id/2407.

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A wireless sensor network is a network of distributed nodes each equipped with its own sensors, computational resources and transceivers. These sensors are designed to be able to sense specific phenomenon over a large geographic area and communicate this information to the user. Most sensor networks are designed to be stand-alone systems that can operate without user intervention for long periods of time. While the use of wireless sensor networks have been demonstrated in various military and commercial applications, their full potential has not been realized primarily due to the lack of efficient methods to self organize and cover the entire area of interest. Techniques currently available focus solely on homogeneous wireless sensor networks either in terms of static networks or mobile networks and suffers from device specific inadequacies such as lack of coverage, power and fault tolerance. Failing nodes result in coverage loss and breakage in communication connectivity and hence there is a pressing need for a fault tolerant system to allow replacing of the failed nodes. In this dissertation, a unique hybrid sensor network is demonstrated that includes a host of mobile sensor platforms. It is shown that the coverage area of the static sensor network can be improved by self-organizing the mobile sensor platforms to allow interaction with the static sensor nodes and thereby increase the coverage area. The performance of the hybrid sensor network is analyzed for a set of N mobile sensors to determine and optimize parameters such as the position of the mobile nodes for maximum coverage of the sensing area without loss of signal between the mobile sensors, static nodes and the central control station. A novel approach to tracking dynamic targets is also presented. Unlike other tracking methods that are based on computationally complex methods, the strategy adopted in this work is based on a computationally simple but effective technique of received signal strength indicator measurements. The algorithms developed in this dissertation are based on a number of reasonable assumptions that are easily verified in a densely distributed sensor network and require simple computations that efficiently tracks the target in the sensor field. False alarm rate, probability of detection and latency are computed and compared with other published techniques. The performance analysis of the tracking system is done on an experimental testbed and also through simulation and the improvement in accuracy over other methods is demonstrated.
Ph.D.
School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Engineering and Computer Science
Modeling and Simulation PhD
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Baker, Amanda. "Understanding the Influence of Diverse Media Content on Men’s Body Image: The Moderating Effect of Self-Determination on Male Self-Surveillance, Self-Evaluations, and Cognitive Performance." Thesis, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/36546.

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Grounded in self-determination theory (Deci & Ryan, 1985, 2000) and objectification theory (Fredrickson & Roberts, 1997), the purpose of this thesis was to investigate the role of dispositional autonomous and controlled motivation in predicting who might be more protected from or more vulnerable to experiencing state self-objectification (Manuscript 1), diminished cognitive functioning or cognitive performance (Manuscript 1 & 2), and poorer self-evaluations (Manuscript 2) following exposure to advertisements portraying one of two leading cultural body ideals: the male muscular ideal (Manuscript 1) or female thin ideal (Manuscript 2). The objectives were to investigate the effects of the two ideals while evaluating the contribution of autonomous and controlled motivation orientation in statistically predicting various body image consequences using five separate male undergraduate samples. Consistent with the overall hypotheses of the thesis, the muscular ideal video and thin ideal video significantly decreased men’s cognitive functioning and cognitive performance compared to men in the neutral video conditions (Manuscript 1 & 2). In addition, men who were primed with the muscular ideal video demonstrated significantly higher levels of self-objectification compared to those in the neutral condition (Manuscript 1: Study 1 and Study 2). Mediation results revealed an indirect effect of the muscular ideal video on men’s cognitive functioning (i.e., appearance schema activation) through self-objectification (Manuscript 1: Study 1), thereby supporting objectification theory as a means of explaining how portrayals of muscular body ideals affect men’s cognitive function. However, inconsistent with previous studies, the female thin ideal did not significantly affect men’s self-evaluations (Manuscript 2: Study 2). Lastly, in line with self-determination theory, all five studies (Manuscript 1 & 2) found that autonomous motivation orientation played a significant moderating role against the cognitive consequences associated with cultural body ideals among young college men. Men who viewed the muscular ideal video and who reported high levels of dispositional autonomous motivation demonstrated less appearance schema activation, less difficulty solving a challenging Soma puzzle, and performed better on the Modified Stroop task compared to men with low levels of dispositional autonomous motivation (Manuscript 1). Similarly, men who reported high levels of dispositional autonomous motivation and viewed the thin ideal also demonstrated less appearance schema activation and less difficulty solving a challenging Soma puzzle compared to men who reported low levels of dispositional autonomous motivation (Manuscript 2). In contrast, controlled motivation orientation was not a significant moderator across all five studies (Manuscript 1 & 2). Collectively, our findings highlight the importance of incorporating autonomous motivation orientation and self-objectification into theoretical models of men’s body image.
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Shanahan, Rebecca Kemball. "Performing and Documenting Post-Internet: Feminist Needlecraft and a Poetics of Surveilling." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/18968.

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My doctoral research practice consists primarily of gallery-based needlecraft performances and moving image works made from the performances’ documentation. I have mended clothes belonging to community members, unravelled and reknitted yarn into new garments, and sewed labels onto the clothes of gallery visitors. These performances have been recorded using security and action cameras and the resulting stills and footage edited into new video works. My overarching argument is that, given that one of art’s dominant contexts is that of capitalism, in which ideas and objects may be defined in relation to their role as luxury commodities, one more ethically-tuned approach to artmaking is to turn away from the art market and adopt a feminist critique of contemporary culture that recognises women’s unpaid labour. Following the Conceptual principle of dematerialisation, I have oriented my practice away from commodity production and opened it to temporal performative practices, claiming feminist purpose in my use of needlecraft as a gendered performance medium. My performance practice of ‘total giving’ is a metaphor for the invisible ‘iceberg economy’ of women’s unpaid labour that props up and enables capitalism. A further argument is that since our everyday relationship with photography has changed in the last few years due to the saturation of mobile phones and surveilling cameras, contemporary lens-based practice needs to reflect new conditions of presentness, performativity and operator-less affect. These conditions have changed our understanding of the medium and our way of being in the world. My use of selfsurveillance and screens during performances models our conscious performance of identity in a condition of perpetual present-ness, the centrality of performance documents to contemporary life, and the possibility of experiencing affect from surveilling camera footage with its qualities of displacement and objectivity. There are thus multiple differing registers and histories to this work: the gendered nature of textiles and its feminist roles; art’s sticky relationship with capitalism; the ongoing feminist project to achieve equity and agency under capitalism both in and out of the art world; how camera phones and the internet have made us performers in a perpetual present; finally, how the ‘cool’ gaze of a surveilling lens might paradoxically invoke emotional responses in viewers. These differing strands have emerged as I have sought to analyse how my work might meaningfully and poetically contribute to contemporary life and culture, and advocate ideas I believe important for any culture’s healthy progression. A further dimension to this work is the emotional apprehension of transience, which has long been core to my photographic work and now extends to my performative and textile work. The Japanese concepts mu, ma, mujo and mono no aware are important. Mu and ma speak to consciousness of absence and transience; emptiness that is full of possibility; space or interval that is profound. Mujo speaks to the understanding that everything that is born must die, and mono no aware means consciously to attend to, and/or to take poignant, mournful pleasure in, impermanence. My work is also informed by the cinema term temps mort. Translating from the French as ‘dead time’, temps mort refers to the cinematic time before or after action takes place, characters enter the frame or narrative progresses. My final installation plan is to merge live performance with material relics of previous performances and video works created from surveillance documentation of previous performances. In doing so I aim to create spatial and temporal proximity between performed activities and their material residues and documentation, presenting both as interdependent, integrated artworks.
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Samples, Agnes Mary Banks. "Validity of Self-Reported Data on Seat Belt Use: The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System." [Johnson City, Tenn. : East Tennessee State University], 2004. http://etd-submit.etsu.edu/etd/theses/available/etd-0315104-172201/unrestricted/SamplesA032604f.pdf.

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Thesis (Ed. D.)--East Tennessee State University, 2004.
Title from electronic submission form. ETSU ETD database URN: etd-0315104-172201. Includes bibliographical references. Also available via Internet at the UMI web site.
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Ip, Wai Ho. "Am I being watched on the internet?: examining user perceptions of privacy, stress and self-monitoring under online surveillance." HKBU Institutional Repository, 2013. https://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/etd_oa/26.

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Modes of communication in modern society have become instant and frequent. Internet users usually post ongoing activities and check their friends’ statuses with texts and photos in social networking sites. During information seeking and sharing processes, they enable peer-to-peer surveillance on the Internet. The present research adopts Foucault’s (1977) Panopticon as a metaphor to investigate this new advent of online surveillance. Surveillance from unknown people on the Internet may not always exist, but the perception of being surveilled could be embedded in the users’ mind. This kind of suspicion may generate some surveillance effects such as low self-esteem and communication discouragement, namely panoptic effects without the presence of actual surveillance (Botan, 1996). This study focuses on the negative panoptic effects to Internet users, leading to three hypotheses related to privacy infringement, Internet stress and self-monitoring. An online survey was conducted with 325 respondents aged from 18 to 29. Regression analyses were used to investigate the explanatory power of one’s perception of being surveilled on the outcome variables. The results showed that the respondents with higher level of perceived online surveillance report higher sense of privacy infringement, more situational stress and higher desire of self-monitoring in their online disclosure. With awareness of being surveilled, the respondents realize the information they share online may be exposed to anonymous observers and be prone to storage and dissemination, resulting in privacy infringement. Since online information could be exposed and misused, the respondents feel stressful to share their views and emotions online. They may conduct self-censorship on their online disclosure so as to acquire credits from other Internet users and avoid punishment for improper manner. Implications of these findings are discussed in detail.
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Dodds, Christopher, and chris@iconinc com au. "Avatars and the Invisible Omniscience: The panoptical model within virtual worlds." RMIT University. Creative Media, 2008. http://adt.lib.rmit.edu.au/adt/public/adt-VIT20080424.100301.

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This Exegesis and accompanying artworks are the culmination of research conducted into the existence of surveillance in virtual worlds. A panoptical model has been used, and its premise tested through the extension into these communal spaces. Issues such as data security, personal and corporate privacy have been investigated, as has the use of art as a propositional mode. This Exegesis contains existing and new theoretical arguments and observations that have aided the development of research outcomes; a discussion of action research as a methodology; and questionnaire outcomes assisting in understanding player perceptions and concerns. A series of artworks were completed during the research to aid in understanding the nature of virtual surveillance; as a method to examine outcomes; and as an experiential interface for viewers of the research. The artworks investigate a series of surveillance perspectives including parental gaze, machine surveillance and self-surveillance. The outcomes include considerations into the influence surveillance has on player behaviour, security issues pertaining to the extension of corporations into virtual worlds, the acceptance of surveillance by virtual communities, and the merits of applying artworks as proposition.
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Books on the topic "Self-surveillance"

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Meyer, Katie. The Maine suicide and self-inflicted injury surveillance report. [Augusta, Me.]: Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 2006.

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Kudryakov, Sergey, Valeriy Kul'chickiy, Nikolay Povarenkin, Viktor Ponomarev, Evgeniy Rubcov, and Evgeniy Sobolev. Radio engineering support of aircraft flights and aviation telecommunications. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1242223.

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The training manual describes the basics of radio engineering support for flights, the organization of radio engineering support for flights, and the general characteristics of flight support equipment. Information is provided about drive radios, marker beacons, radio beacon landing systems, automatic direction finders, RSBN system, VOR and DME beacons, satellite navigation systems, as well as radar surveillance equipment. The basics of telecommunications, issues of aviation telecommunications, as well as information about the means of aviation telecommunications are presented. There are questions for self-control. It is intended for students studying under the specialty program in the specialty 25.05.05 "Aircraft operation and air traffic management"; for students studying under the bachelor's program in the direction of training 25.03.04 "Airport operation and aircraft flight support", as well as for students studying under the master's program in the direction 25.04.04 "Airport Operation and aircraft flight support".
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Civil Aviation Authority. Self launching motor gliders - secondary surveillance radar Transponders. Stationery Office, The, 2008.

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Civil Aviation Authority. Self-launching motor gliders - secondary surveillance radar Transponders. Stationery Office, The, 2009.

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Fundamentals of fetal health surveillance: A self-learning manual. Vancouver, BC: British Columbia Perinatal Health Program, 2009.

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U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research. Division of Engineering. and Construction Technology Laboratories (Portland Cement Association), eds. Self-monitoring surveillance system for prestressing tendons: Phase I small business innovation research. Washington, DC: Division of Engineering Technology, Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 1995.

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U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research. Division of Engineering. and Construction Technology Laboratories (Portland Cement Association), eds. Self-monitoring surveillance system for prestressing tendons: Phase I small business innovation research. Washington, DC: Division of Engineering Technology, Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 1995.

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U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research. Division of Engineering. and Construction Technology Laboratories (Portland Cement Association), eds. Self-monitoring surveillance system for prestressing tendons: Phase I small business innovation research. Washington, DC: Division of Engineering Technology, Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 1995.

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Bennett, Colin J., and Christopher Parsons. Privacy and Surveillance: The Multidisciplinary Literature on the Capture, Use, and Disclosure of Personal Information in Cyberspace. Edited by William H. Dutton. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199589074.013.0023.

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This chapter covers the multidisciplinary literature on the protection of personal information in the online world, which extends back to the origins of social research on computing, and addresses the link between key structures of the Internet and the literatures on privacy and surveillance. Then, it turns to the literature on the role of international, legal, self-regulatory, and technological policy instruments in protecting personal information online. The nature of the Internet is entirely consistent with the metaphor of the ‘surveillant assemblage’. The Internet has become a fundamentally ‘surveillance-ready’ technology, and is becoming deeply integrated into the structures of social life. The rise of Internet-enabled surveillance and information control is significant. The story of privacy and surveillance is episodic and reflective of quite frenzied attempts to come to grips with unprecedented technological transformations in the light of the most recent scandal or controversy.
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Claire, North. The Sudden Appearance of Hope. Orbit, 2016.

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Book chapters on the topic "Self-surveillance"

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Cregan, Kate. "Embodying Pregnancy and Self-Surveillance." In Paths to Parenthood, 45–67. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-0143-8_3.

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Smyth, Sara M. "Privacy, surveillance and the self." In Biometrics, Surveillance and the Law, 45–62. New York: Routledge, 2019. | Series: Routledge research in the law of emerging technologies: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429022326-3.

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Wait, Nalina. "Prohibitive and Emancipative Self-Surveillance." In Improvised Dance, 170–201. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003369011-7.

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Pflugfelder, Roman, and Branislav Mičušík. "Self-Calibrating Cameras in Video Surveillance." In Smart Cameras, 161–79. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-0953-4_9.

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Lucas, George. "Cyber Surveillance as Preventive Self-Defense." In Law, Ethics and Emerging Military Technologies, 149–68. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003273912-10.

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Dafnos, Tia, Scott Thompson, and Martin French. "Surveillance and the Colonial Dream: Canada’s Surveillance of Indigenous Self-Determination." In National Security, Surveillance and Terror, 319–42. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-43243-4_14.

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Chang, Chih Ping. "Hiding Self on Facebook Sidebar Ticker, Surveillance, and Privacy." In Lecture Notes in Social Networks, 43–56. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78256-0_3.

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Lipton, Briony. "Academics Online: Reflections on Gendered Precarity and Digital (Self) Surveillance." In Academic Women in Neoliberal Times, 117–64. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-45062-5_4.

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Simão, Jorge. "ASOS: An Adaptive Self-organizing Protocol for Surveillance and Routing in Sensor Networks." In Engineering Self-Organising Systems, 115–31. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-69868-5_8.

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Richer, Toby J., and Dan R. Corbett. "A Self-Organizing Territorial Approach to Multi-robot Search and Surveillance." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 724. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-36187-1_72.

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Conference papers on the topic "Self-surveillance"

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Markwood, Ian D., and Yao Liu. "Vehicle Self-Surveillance." In ASIA CCS '16: ACM Asia Conference on Computer and Communications Security. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2897845.2897917.

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Ferro, Duco, and Alfons Salden. "Self-organizing mobile surveillance security networks." In 2007 2nd Bio-Inspired Models of Network, Information and Computing Systems (BIONETICS). IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/bimnics.2007.4610114.

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Ferro, Duco, and Alfons Salden. "Self-organizing mobile surveillance security networks." In 2nd International ICST Conference on Bio-Inspired Models of Network, Information, and Computing Systems. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/icst.bionetics2007.2478.

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Filonenko, Alexander, Fei Yang, Andrey Vavilin, and Kang-Hyun Jo. "Self-configuration for surveillance sensor network." In 2012 9th International Conference on Ubiquitous Robots and Ambient Intelligence (URAI). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/urai.2012.6463030.

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Mortazavi, Batool. "Self assessment surveillance using e-portfolio." In 2010 Second International Conference on E-Learning and E-Teaching (ICELET 2010). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icelet.2010.5708383.

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Cheema, Amarjeet Pal, Sanjeev Sharma, K. Nandankumar, M. R. Rahul, and E. H. Rohit. "Self-Care, Interactive & Surveillance Robot." In 2022 International Conference on Advances in Computing, Communication and Applied Informatics (ACCAI). IEEE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/accai53970.2022.9752512.

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Liu, Diwen, Ling Cai, Yuming Zhao, and Fuqiao Hu. "Self-adaptive ground calibration in binocular surveillance system." In 2016 24th European Signal Processing Conference (EUSIPCO). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/eusipco.2016.7760455.

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Burne, Richard A., Anna L. Buczak, Vikram R. Jamalabad, Ivan Kadar, and Eitan R. Eadan. "Self-organizing cooperative sensor network for remote surveillance." In Enabling Technologies for Law Enforcement and Security, edited by Edward M. Carapezza and David B. Law. SPIE, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.336957.

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Sutor, S., F. Matusek, and R. Reda. "WSSU: High Performance Wireless Self-Contained, Surveillance Unit; an Ad Hoc Video Surveillance System." In 2008 Fourth Advanced International Conference on Telecommunications (AICT). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/aict.2008.72.

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Kudale, Roma, and Rachana Satao. "STESA: Self Transmission Energy Saving Algorithm for road surveillance." In 2013 Tenth International Conference on Wireless and Optical Communications Networks - (WOCN). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/wocn.2013.6616230.

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Reports on the topic "Self-surveillance"

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Nelson, Michael L., Kimberly Case, Linda Hergesheimer, Maxine Johnson, Doug Parker, Rick Staten, and Scott Taylor. EVMS Self-Surveillance of Remote Handled Low Level Waste (RHLLW) Project. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), July 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1116748.

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Tabatabai, H. Self-monitoring surveillance system for prestressing tendons. Phase I small business innovation research. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/177396.

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Wells, Timothy S. DoD-Wide Medical Surveillance for Potential Long-Term Adverse Events Associated With Smallpox Vaccination, Hospitalizations, and Self-Reported Outcomes. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, January 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada442304.

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Savedoff, William, Pedro Bernal, Marcella Distrutti, Laura Goyoneche, and Carolina Bernal. Open configuration options Going Beyond Normal Challenges for Health and Healthcare in Latin America and the Caribbean Exposed by Covid-19. Inter-American Development Bank, May 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0004242.

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This technical note describes how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected Latin America and the Caribbean, and considers the implications for future population health, health spending, healthcare service reforms, and investments to prepare for future health emergencies. It provides a summary of the few existing empirical studies and then contributes original analysis using administrative data from hospitals and vital registration systems in five countries. It shows substantial declines in health and healthcare delivery during the first year of the pandemic, especially for preventive and elective care. Some countries were able to return healthcare to historical levels, while others were still below average in 2021. The study concludes with reflections on how the pandemic has altered health policy recommendations for the region, generating a greater sense of urgency to make progress on long-standing agendas such as eliminating fragmentation, integrating care, and pursuing digital transformation while reordering priorities toward investments in emergency preparedness, disease surveillance, resilience, and self-sufficiency. In other words, going beyond normal.
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Prevalence of sexually transmitted infections among men who have sex with men and injecting drug users and validation of audio computer-assisted self interview (ACASI) technique in Abuja, Lagos, and Ibadan, Nigeria: Technical report. Population Council, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/hiv14.1004.

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Most-at-risk populations (MARPS), including men who have sex with men (MSM) and injecting drug users (IDUs), represent 1 percent of Nigeria’s population yet account for 38 percent of new HIV infections. Despite their elevated risk, MSM and IDUs are less likely than the general population to access HIV prevention and sexual health services because of stigmatization. There is a dearth of data on prevalence of HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among MSM and IDUs because their behaviors make them difficult to be reached programmatically and engaged in research. While the need for HIV and STI prevalence data is clear, there is also a need to improve the quality and reliability of behavioral data collected for national surveillance, where these stigmatized subpopulations may underreport sensitive behaviors that put them most at risk. This technical report provides details of a study that sought to determine the prevalence of HIV and STIs and sexual and injecting risk behaviors in MSM and male IDUs, and determine if Audio Computer-Assisted Self Interviews provide more accurate reporting of risk behaviors than face-to-face interviewing.
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Prevalence of sexually transmitted infections among men who have sex with men and injecting drug users and validation of audio computer-assisted self interview (ACASI) technique in Abuja, Lagos, and Ibadan, Nigeria: Report Fact Sheet. Population Council, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/hiv14.1005.

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Most-at-risk populations (MARPS), including men who have sex with men (MSM) and injecting drug users (IDUs), represent only 1 percent of Nigeria’s population yet account for 38 percent of new HIV infections. Despite their elevated risk, MSM and IDUs are less likely than the general population to access HIV prevention and sexual health services because of stigmatization. There is a dearth of data on prevalence of HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among MSM and IDUs because their behaviors make them difficult to be reached programmatically and engaged in research. While the need for HIV and STI prevalence data is clear, there is also a need to improve the quality and reliability of behavioral data collected for national surveillance, where these stigmatized subpopulations may underreport sensitive behaviors that put them most at risk. As noted in this fact sheet, computer-based interviewing systems are becoming an accepted alternative to face-to-face interviews, providing an efficient and replicable research tool for collecting sensitive behavioral data.
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