Errors and interaction : a cognitive ethnography of emergency medicine /
"Trasmundi combines her background as a cognitive ethnographer with theory of radical embodied cognition and interaction to investigate how healthcare practitioners manage cognitive events in patient treatment and diagnosing that often lead to human errors. This interdisciplinary focus emphasis...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
[2020]
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Colección: | Pragmatics & beyond new series,
volume 309 |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro
- Errors and Interaction
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Dedication page
- Table of contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I. Investigating errors in healthcare interaction
- 1. The ecology of human errors in emergency medicine
- 1. Background: Errare humanum est?
- 1.1 Two models of human error
- 1.1.1 The person model
- 1.1.2 The system model
- 2. Critique: Research incommensurability
- 3. An ecological approach to human error: From errors to error cycles
- Acknowledgements
- 2. A cognitive ethnography of emergency medicine
- 1. How errors, interaction and cognition can be studied 'in the wild'
- 2. Cognitive ethnography and its roots in distributed cognition
- 2.1 Beyond the representationalist view of distributed cognition: The role of interactivity
- 2.1.1 Methodological challenges when studying authentic ecologies of emergency medicine
- 2.2 Cognitive Event Analysis (CEA)
- Part II. Behind the scenes: Welcome to the emergency ward
- 3. Presenting the case of the emergency ward
- 1. Stepping into the emergency ward
- 1.2 Coding, visualisation and data presentation
- 4. Medical errors and visual perception
- 1. The hypothesis of visual perception
- 2. Distributed visual systems: What makes human perception special
- 3. Case 1: Temporal dynamics and visual perception
- 3.1 The distributed patient
- 3.2 The heterarchical roles of artefacts
- 3.3 Semantic memory: Categories as constraints in diagnostic processes
- 4. Case II: Sense-saturated visual systems, intentionality and tendencies in visual perception
- 4.1 Moulding the optic array through sense-saturated locomotion
- 4.2 The historical body, the flow of perception, and timescales
- 5. Case III: Random manipulation: Developing the visual system through probing-activities
- 5.1 Moving as seeing: An undeveloped visual system
- 6. Understanding visual systems
- 5. The function of procedures in the diagnostic process: Anamnesis and physical examination
- 1. The function of procedures
- 2. Case I: Enacting and discarding procedures
- 2.1 Beyond fixed procedures: Meshing anamnesis with physical examination
- 2.2 Think-aloud strategies: Verbal utterances as material anchors
- 2.3 Embodied procedures
- 3. Case II: Procedure following: Cognitive complexity and simplicity
- 3.1 The use of notebooks in anamnesis: Managing the complexity of writing and interacting at the same time
- 4. Understanding the status and function of procedures and expertise
- 6. Interruptions and multitask tolerance in emergency medicine
- 1. Interruptions and values realisation in emergency medicine
- 2. Case I: Treating interruptions as what?
- 2.1 Low multitask tolerance
- 2.2 When caring for more than the patient becomes a constraint for task performance
- 2.3 Seeking good prospects