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Outputs (78)

Review of Networking and Tangible Security Techniques for Domestic IoT Devices and Initial Ideas (2020)
Preprint / Working Paper
Zakhary, S., Sunil, N., & Mcauley, D. Review of Networking and Tangible Security Techniques for Domestic IoT Devices and Initial Ideas

The number of connected devices including Internet of Things (IoTs) on the Internet is growing fast. According to recent Gartner research, the estimated number of IoT devices is 5.8 billion in 2020 (Gartner, 2019). The countries that are leading the... Read More about Review of Networking and Tangible Security Techniques for Domestic IoT Devices and Initial Ideas.

Who is Responsible for Data Processing in Smart Homes? Reconsidering Joint Controllership and the Household Exemption (2020)
Journal Article
Chen, J., Edwards, L., Urquhart, L., & Mcauley, D. (2020). Who is Responsible for Data Processing in Smart Homes? Reconsidering Joint Controllership and the Household Exemption. International Data Privacy Law, 10(4), 279–293. https://doi.org/10.1093/idpl/ipaa011

The growing industrial and research interest in protecting privacy and fighting cyberattacks for smart homes has sparked various innovations in security- and privacy-enhancing technologies (S/PETs) powered by edge computing. The complex technical set... Read More about Who is Responsible for Data Processing in Smart Homes? Reconsidering Joint Controllership and the Household Exemption.

Crowdsourcing Formulaic Phrases: towards a new type of spoken corpus (2020)
Journal Article
Adolphs, S., Knight, D., Smith, C., & Price, D. (2020). Crowdsourcing Formulaic Phrases: towards a new type of spoken corpus. Corpora, 15(2), 141-168. https://doi.org/10.3366/cor.2020.0192

Corpora have revolutionised the way we describe and analyse language in use. The sheer scale of collections of texts, along with the appropriate software for structuring and analysing this data, has led to a fuller understanding of the characteristic... Read More about Crowdsourcing Formulaic Phrases: towards a new type of spoken corpus.

Response to Call for Evidence – Joint Select Committee on Human Rights: The Government’s response to COVID-19: human rights implications (2020)
Other
McAuley, D., Koene, A., & Chen, J. (2020). Response to Call for Evidence – Joint Select Committee on Human Rights: The Government’s response to COVID-19: human rights implications

This submission addresses the three questions formulated in the Joint Select Committee’s call with a particular focus on both the digital rights implications of the Government’s measures against COVID-19 and the wider human rights implications of the... Read More about Response to Call for Evidence – Joint Select Committee on Human Rights: The Government’s response to COVID-19: human rights implications.

Using Internet of Things to Reduce Office Workers’ Sedentary Behavior: Intervention Development Applying the Behavior Change Wheel and Human-Centered Design Approach (2020)
Journal Article
Huang, Y., Benford, S., Price, D., Patel, R., Li, B., Ivanov, A., & Blake, H. (2020). Using Internet of Things to Reduce Office Workers’ Sedentary Behavior: Intervention Development Applying the Behavior Change Wheel and Human-Centered Design Approach. JMIR mHealth and uHealth, 8(7), Article e17914. https://doi.org/10.2196/17914

Background: Sedentary behavior (SB) is associated with various adverse health outcomes. The prevalence of prolonged sitting at work among office workers makes a case for SB interventions to target this setting and population. Everyday mundane objects... Read More about Using Internet of Things to Reduce Office Workers’ Sedentary Behavior: Intervention Development Applying the Behavior Change Wheel and Human-Centered Design Approach.

Towards understanding how individuals with inflammatory bowel disease use contemporary social media platforms for health-related discourse (2020)
Journal Article
O'Leary, K., Coulson, N., Perez-Vallejos, E., & McAuley, D. (2020). Towards understanding how individuals with inflammatory bowel disease use contemporary social media platforms for health-related discourse. Computers in Human Behavior, 112, Article 106463. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2020.106463

© 2020 With a growing prevalence of social media use worldwide where individuals share varying aspects of their lives, this paper focuses on how individuals with a chronic illness use these communications platforms to discuss their health. This paper... Read More about Towards understanding how individuals with inflammatory bowel disease use contemporary social media platforms for health-related discourse.