CS547 Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design)
Fridays 12:50-2:05 · Gates B01 · Open to the public- 20 years of speakers
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Kate Collie · University of British Columbia
Challenging the Videoconferencing Gold Standard: Art Therapy and Tele-Mediated Communication in Behavioral Telehealth March 7, 2003 In the world of behavioral telehealth, high-quality videoconferencing
is usually assumed to be the best way for a psychiatrist or therapist
in one location to communicate with a patient or client in another
location. This assumption is being challenged by work being done
at the University of British Columbia (UBC) by an interdisciplinary
team of researchers, led by Kate Collie, who are looking at Internet-supported
art therapy as a form of psychotherapy that may be particularly
well suited for distance delivery when the modes of communication
are speech and hand-drawn images. In this presentation, Kate will give an overview of the work being done at UBC as a starting point for discussing research from a wide range of fields in which modes of mediated and non-mediated communication have been compared on measures related to task completion and relationship formation. She will highlight key differences between visual and verbal, written and spoken, and synchronous and asynchronous communication that have been identified, and examine why videoconferencing is often preferred, in spite of the demonstrated superiority of audio-only communication for most types of distance interpersonal interactions. |
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