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E-raamat: Mobile Response: First International Workshop on Mobile Information Technology, for Emergency Response, Mobile Response 2007, Sankt Augustin, Germany, February 22-23, 2007. Revised Selected Papers

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  • Sari: Lecture Notes in Computer Science 4458
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Nov-2007
  • Kirjastus: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783540756682
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Lecture Notes in Computer Science 4458
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Nov-2007
  • Kirjastus: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783540756682

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The interest in mobile information technology for emergency response (ER) comes from the simple fact that an important part of this work is done in the ?eld. With little or no infrastructure to rely on, ER operatives have to make do with the tools they bring along. Of course, ER organizations build, invest in and do rely on infrastructure for their operations and this includes sophisticated stationary information technology. The systems used for dispatching ER units are a good example for this. While such systems are very important to support strategic planning and decision making, the e ects of emergency response work eventuallyhaveto be createdonsite. And this includes bothobtaining the inf- mation required for taking informed decisions as well as implementing decisions through targeted actions in the ?eld. All of this is of course not new. The tra- o? between responding quickly with the available resources to the situation at hand and responding with more deliberation to strategic goals and constraints is not inherent to the use of information technology but to responding to em- gencies in general. What is new is that current and foreseeable innovations in mobile information technology have the potential to o er substantially better support for emergency response ?eld work, resulting in better solutions for this trade-o . By providing better gathering, communication and processing of re- vant informationbetweenall actorsinvolved,we believe that mobile information technology can be a valuable tool in the hands of ER professionals to increase the speed, precision, e ciency and e ectiveness of their operations.
Keynote Presentation
Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management
1(8)
Kees Nieuwenhuis
Medical Services
Aspects of Anatomical and Chronological Sequence Diagrams in Software-Supported Emergency Care Patient Report Forms
9(10)
Franz Waldher
Jurgen Thierry
Simon Grasser
Mobile Devices in Emergency Medical Services: User Evaluation of a PDA-Based Interface for Ambulance Run Reporting
19(10)
Luca Chittaro
Francesco Zuliani
Elio Carchietti
Feasible Hardware Setups for Emergency Reporting Systems
29(10)
Carmen Hafner
Jurgen Thierry
Team Support
Suppporting Implicit Coordination Between Distributed Teams in Disaster Management
39(12)
Chris Baber
James Cross
Paul Smith
Dengel Robinson
AMIRA: Advanced Multi-modal Intelligence for Remote Assistance
51(10)
Eric Auriol
SaR Resource Management Based on Description Logics
61(10)
Jens Pottebaum
Stasinos Konstantopoulos
Rainer Koch
Georgios Paliouras
Geospatial Information
Adding Space to Location in Mobile Emergency Response Technologies
71(6)
Peter Frohlich
Rainer Simon
Christian Kaufmann
Intelligent Cartographic Presentations for Emergency Situations
77(8)
Vera Hernandez Ernst
Mark Ostrovskii
Hybrid Radio Frequency Identification System for Use in Disaster Relief as Positioning Source and Emergency Message Boards
85(10)
Osamu Takizawa
Akihiro Shibayama
Masafumi Hosokawa
Ken'ichi Takanashi
Masahiro Murakami
Yoshiaki Hisada
Yasushi Hada
Kuniaki Kawabata
Itsuki Noda
Hajime Asama
Wearable Computing
Managing Catastrophic Events by Wearable Mobile Systems
95(11)
Annalisa Bonfiglio
Nicola Carbonaro
Cyril Chuzel
Davide Curone
Gabriela Dudnik
Fabio Germagnoli
David Hatherall
Jean Mark Koller
Thierry Lanier
Giannicola Loriga
Jean Luprano
Giovanni Magenes
Rita Paradiso
Alessandro Tognetti
Guy Voirin
Rhys Waite
Towards the Integration of Real-Time Real-World Data in Urban Search and Rescue Simulation
106(10)
Holger Kenn
Alexander Kleiner
Playing with Fire: User-Centered Design of Wearable Computing for Emergency Response
116(10)
Markus Klann
Communication Technology
Improving Communication for Mobile Devices in Disaster Response
126(9)
Patricia Gomez Bello
Ignacio Aedo
Fausto Sainz
Paloma Diaz
Jennifer Munnelly
Siobhan Clarke
Robust Audio Indexing and Keyword Retrieval Optimized for the Rescue Operation Domain
135(8)
Daniel Schneider
Thomas Winkler
Jobst Loffler
Jochen Schon
Extending the Fire Dispatch System into the Mobile Domain
143(10)
Andreas Meissner
Ralf Eck
Recalling Resilient Actions During Emergency Response
153(10)
Marcelo Indio dos Reis
Marcos R.S. Borges
Jose Orlando Gomes
Author Index 163