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1 ng strategies: ophthalmoscopy, telemedicine, assistive AI with telemedicine review, and autonomous AI
3 OP screening was cost-effective up to $7 for assistive and $34 for autonomous screening compared with
4 t reaching task while the robot applied both assistive and resistive moments on the head during the t
5 ension of AI in health care, emphasizing its assistive and supplementary role to medical professional
9 sion impairments, either released as special assistive apps claiming to help in tasks such as text or
10 nce that spinal cord stimulation could be an assistive as well as a restorative approach for upper-li
11 artificial intelligence (AI) technology, the assistive chatbot ChatGPT, in the context of midlevel pr
12 s the potential utility of iBCIs as powerful assistive communication devices for people with limited
16 linicians, who were randomized to one of two assistive conditions: assistance from search engines and
17 d biomechanical impacts of a SLACK suit (non-assistive) controller versus three controllers with vary
19 m that decodes the intended movement, and an assistive device such as a robot limb or computer that i
20 .7] vs 4.3 [20.8]; Cohen d = 0.7), increased assistive device utilization (20.8% [104 of 500] vs 3.0%
24 measure of functioning for RA, include only assistive devices and personal assistance, which were no
27 revalence of activity limitations and use of assistive devices and the association of limitations wit
31 earing device options, cochlear implant, and assistive devices can help direct management of the pati
34 e useful control signals for neuroprosthetic assistive devices designed to interact with objects in a
36 computer interfaces (BCIs) enable control of assistive devices in individuals with severe motor impai
40 ive participants were more likely to require assistive devices such as a walker or wheelchair for mob
41 d soon be an important supplement to hearing-assistive devices such as CIs or offer an alternative fo
42 r implants, bone anchored devices, or use of assistive devices such as frequency modulating systems.
43 y related to audiologist recommendations for assistive devices such as hearing aids and/or frequency
44 dge could be useful to develop therapies and assistive devices that target the least metabolically ec
45 ow people with paralysis to directly control assistive devices using neural activity associated with
47 participants could hear soft speech without assistive devices, and 3 had average normal hearing sens
48 odifying the built environment and providing assistive devices, and for persons with more serious dis
49 The use of supplemental oxygen, need for assistive devices, and job loss were more common in lowe
50 elf-reported activity limitations and use of assistive devices, and prevalence standardised by age an
51 t rely on body movements to control external assistive devices, have been proposed as a safe and robu
53 italizations, diagnostic tests, medications, assistive devices, nonallopathic treatments, travel to v
54 Nonoperative-intervention strategies such as assistive devices, orthoses, and viscosupplements are fr
56 using 4 specific behavioral accommodations (assistive devices, personal assistance, limits on the am
71 ients included driving (27.8%), using visual assistive equipment (17.5%), mobility (16.3%), performin
72 ission dependency, were discharged with more assistive equipment and supplemental oxygen, spent more
73 nowledge of the functional status, discharge assistive equipment, and follow-up medical recommendatio
74 pre-COVID-19 admission dependency, discharge assistive equipment, discharge medical follow-up recomme
77 r passive, depending on whether there was an assistive force provided by the apparatus), and (c) the
78 lds of use for imperceptible therapeutic and assistive haptic technologies supporting care and diseas
79 ess of current speech separation methods for assistive hearing devices as well as neuroprosthetic dev
83 their interest in the concept of a universal assistive listening device receiver, and their interest
85 and made many suggestions for both improving assistive listening devices and for improving informatio
87 loss was conducted to determine their use of assistive listening devices for face-to-face conversatio
89 t communication effectiveness, hearing aids, assistive listening devices, and cochlear implants for s
90 plification devices, such as hearing aids or assistive listening devices, cochlear implants, aural re
91 part of an audience, their satisfaction with assistive listening devices, their interest in the conce
92 de that the amnioserosa must play a key, but assistive, mechanical role that aids uncurling of the ge
93 rt the comparative transcriptome atlas as an assistive modality for complex classification of rare ki
94 of the comparative transcriptome atlas as an assistive modality for complex classification of rare ki
95 ble-driven actuators and sensors, generating assistive moments in concert with biological muscles.
98 lation, constraint-induced movement therapy, assistive orthoses, noninvasive brain stimulation, virtu
101 e suggests that access to essential mobility assistive products (MAPs) might be dependent on non-clin
102 support efforts towards expanding access to assistive products and identifying groups that could par
104 intervention, painting and singing, personal assistive robot, cognitive-behavioral therapy, play acti
105 r the use of brain-evoked potential to train assistive robotic devices through the use of neuroprosth
106 t difference between the effects of socially assistive robots and a plush toy, and there was no effec
107 However, before recommendations for socially assistive robots can be made, a cost-effectiveness analy
108 ment and widespread adoption of a variety of assistive robots for both able-bodied and mobility-impai
111 ic reviews including the effects of socially assistive robots on health outcomes were included and a
112 ush toy, and there was no effect of socially assistive robots on psychiatric outcomes including agita
113 eta-analysis indicated no effect of socially assistive robots on quality of life (standard mean diffe
116 e, a cost-effectiveness analysis of socially assistive robots to improve mood across the lifespan, an
117 or reports that contain errors we develop an assistive setting, a demonstration of clinician-AI colla
118 resent a further step toward everyday use of assistive, soft, robotic wearables for the upper limbs.
123 rain-machine interfaces (BMIs) provide a new assistive strategy aimed at restoring mobility in severe
126 , cyber-attack detection relies on reactive, assistive techniques, where pattern-matching algorithms
127 tion with potential applications in auditory assistive technologies aimed at enhancing speech recogni
128 otential for various applications, including assistive technologies and cognitive enhancements, to fu
129 ers is crucial for enhancing the adoption of assistive technologies and ultimately improving the qual
133 d to allow persons with paralysis to operate assistive technologies or to reanimate muscles based upo
135 e the sensation of touch and pain, and (iii) assistive technologies to enable disabled people to oper
136 gaps, ultimately rehabilitation programs and assistive technologies will need to fit the specific dem
138 rontiers in computer vision, particularly in assistive technologies, augmented reality, and human-com
139 and little capacity to manufacture essential assistive technologies, including prostheses and wheelch
143 hearing aids, cochlear implants, or hearing assistive technologies; and rehabilitation service provi
144 ed for the purpose of placing or maintaining assistive technology (696 interventions [21.0%]) or for
145 g pHRI at the hand that may be applicable to assistive technology and physical rehabilitation, human-
148 f appropriate and carefully selected hearing assistive technology may contribute dramatically to the
151 recommendation of specific interventions or assistive technology than is currently possible in stand
152 erations in providing hearing aids and other assistive technology to individuals with dual sensory im
153 culture emergence and recent trends in using assistive technology to reduce the burden of Alzheimer's
154 ost currently available evidence for hearing assistive technology use by adults focuses on frequency-
155 ified schedule, transfer to different tasks, assistive technology, and coaching offered during the fi
156 or applications in HCI, such as prosthetics, assistive technology, rehabilitation, and human-robot co
159 Together, these advances pave the way for an assistive therapy that could benefit all ALS patients.
160 into clinical workflows, offers a promising assistive tool for clinicians, which could enable earlie
162 ve design framework can be implemented as an assistive tool in exploring design-feature trade-offs of
163 ould also be developed into a rehabilitative/assistive tool that can result in flexible movements of
165 mingly sentient and intelligent robots as an assistive tool within and beyond education settings.
168 g, training new sonographers, more effective assistive tools for human experts, and enhancement of th
169 rently being evaluated in the development of assistive tools for the determination of transfer order
173 d new contexts using exoskeletons that apply assistive torques to each ankle at each walking step.