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Das Gesundheitswesen ist konfrontiert mit steigenden Kosten und einer immer schwieriger werdenden Personalsituation. Zeitgleich versprechen moderne Sprachsteuerungssysteme Prozesse in Arztpraxen und Krankenhäusern zu verschlanken und Vorgänge zu beschleunigen. Dennoch wird derzeit der Einsatz von Sprachsteuerungssystemen in Arztpraxen oder Krankenhäusern nur selten beobachtet, was auch an den besonders strengen Datenschutzauflagen der Datenschutzgrundverordnung (DSGVO) liegt. Darüber hinaus wirft die niedrige Nutzungsrate die Frage nach den konkreten Anforderungen und ihrer Umsetzbarkeit auf, was durch den vorliegenden Beitrag adressiert wird, indem die Ergebnisse von Interviews mit acht medizinischen Fachexperten ausgewertet werden. Ergänzend wird die technische Umsetzbarkeit einzelner Anforderungen mit unterschiedlichen Cloud-Anbietern erprobt.
Das Werk kommentiert leicht verständlich, aktuell und praxisnah die DSGVO sowie das BDSG und - neu - auch das TTDSG (Telekommunikation-Telemedien-Datenschutzgesetz). Verantwortliche erhalten damit eine umfassende Darstellung mit Handlungsempfehlungen zum gesamten neuen Datenschutzrecht. Betriebliche Datenschutzbeauftragte können sich an den fundierten Kommentierungen orientieren, in denen Literatur und Rechtsprechung aktuell berücksichtigt wurden.
Inhaltsverzeichnis - Bachelorarbeiten
1. Testamentsgestaltung bei Patchworkfamilien – Lösungsansätze für typische
Praxisprobleme unter Berücksichtigung der Interessenlagen der Parteien
- Ronja Bundrock 4 - 58
2. Die Haftung des AG-Vorstands gegenüber der Gesellschaft in unterneh-
mensinternen und -externen Krisen
- Nico Kremers 59 - 122
3. The Relationship of the Ex-Ante Uncertainty about the Value of a Stock
and its IPO Underpricing – An Analysis of the German Market
- Lennard Pankok 123 - 179
4. Attractiveness Bias in Venture Capital – An Analysis of Investor Decision
Making in “Die Höhle der Löwen”
- Theresa Maria Weisheit 180 - 242
Inhaltsverzeichnis – Masterarbeiten
Erhöhung der Energieautarkie in der Backbranche – Anwendung von bidi-
rektionalem Laden und dessen Auswirkungen auf die Geschäftsprozesse
und Informationssysteme
- Jasper Spoede 243 - 355
Inhaltsverzeichnis - Bachelorarbeiten
1. The impact of the EU non-financial reporting directive on sustainability reporting practices of DAX 30 companies
- Lene Christin Blöcker 4 - 29
2. Kurzarbeit als Krisenbewältigungsinstrument – Die arbeitsrechtlichen Voraussetzungen für die wirksame Einführung von Kurzarbeit
- Julia Esser 30 - 87
3. Die virtuelle Hauptversammlung der Aktiengesellschaft – Notlösung während der Corona-Pandemie oder dauerhafte Alternative?
- Pauline Hengstebeck 88 - 152
4. Die psychische Gesundheit am Arbeitsplatz – Aktuelle Problematik, Ursachenforschung, Folgen, rechtliche Rahmenbedingungen und geeignete Präventionsmaßnahmen aus Arbeitgebersicht
- Carolin Venrath 153 - 224
Inhaltsverzeichnis – Masterarbeiten
The influence of religion on the representation of women in politics
- Eva Scholtes 225 - 345
Wettbewerbsregeln (§§ 24-27)
(2022)
Eye movement modelling examples (EMME) are instructional videos that display a
teacher’s eye movements as “gaze cursor” (e.g. a moving dot) superimposed on the
learning task. This study investigated if previous findings on the beneficial effects of EMME would extend to online lecture videos and compared the effects of displaying the teacher’s gaze cursor with displaying the more traditional mouse cursor as a tool to guide learners’ attention. Novices (N = 124) studied a pre-recorded video lecture on how to model business processes in a 2 (mouse cursor absent/present) × 2 (gaze cursor absent/present) between-subjects design. Unexpectedly, we did not find significant effects of the presence of gaze or mouse cursors on mental effort and learning. However, participants who watched videos with the gaze cursor found it easier to follow the teacher. Overall, participants responded positively to the gaze cursor, especially when the mouse cursor was not displayed in the video.
Providing healthcare services frequently involves cognitively demanding tasks, including diagnoses and analyses as well as complex decisions about treatments and therapy. From a global perspective, ethically significant inequalities exist between regions where the expert knowledge required for these tasks is scarce or abundant. One possible strategy to diminish such inequalities and increase healthcare opportunities in expert-scarce settings is to provide healthcare solutions involving digital technologies that do not necessarily require the presence of a human expert, e.g., in the form of artificial intelligent decision-support systems (AI-DSS). Such algorithmic decision-making, however, is mostly developed in resource- and expert-abundant settings to support healthcare experts in their work. As a practical consequence, the normative standards and requirements for such algorithmic decision-making in healthcare require the technology to be at least as explainable as the decisions made by the experts themselves. The goal of providing healthcare in settings where resources and expertise are scarce might come with a normative pull to lower the normative standards of using digital technologies in order to provide at least some healthcare in the first place. We scrutinize this tendency to lower standards in particular settings from a normative perspective, distinguish between different types of absolute and relative, local and global standards of explainability, and conclude by defending an ambitious and practicable standard of local relative explainability.
A Gamified Information System (GIS) implements game concepts and elements, such as affordances and game design principles to motivate people. Based on the idea to develop a GIS to increase the motivation of software developers to perform software quality tasks, the research work at hand aims at investigating relevant requirements from that target group. Therefore, 14 interviews with software development experts are conducted and analyzed. According to the results, software developers prefer the affordances points, narrative storytelling in a multiplayer and a round-based setting. Furthermore, six design principles for the development of a GIS are derived.
Process mining gets more and more attention even outside large enterprises and can be a major benefit for small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) to gain competitive advantages. Applying process mining is challenging, particularly for SMEs because they have less resources and process maturity. So far, IS researchers analyzed process mining challenges with a focus on larger companies. This paper investigates the application of process mining by means of a case study and sheds light into the particular challenges of an IT SME. The results reveal 13 SME process mining challenges and seven guidelines to address them. In this way, the paper contributes to the understanding of process mining application in SME and shows similarities and differences to larger companies.