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Displaying results 31 - 33 of 33 in total
Collection
2025 Northeast Section Conference
Authors
Noha Alharbi; Peter Cavanaugh
, “Can women entrepreneurs thrive in Saudi Arabia?,” Entreprendre & Innover, no. 2, pp. 100–109, 2021.including descriptive statistics, t-tests, ANOVA, and [7] A. Salamzadeh, L. P. Dana, J. Ghaffari Feyzabadi, M. Hadizadeh, andcorrelation analysis to test hypotheses and validate findings H. Eslahi Fatmesari, “Digital technology as a disentangling force for[90]. Ethical considerations, including data privacy, women entrepreneurs,” World, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 346–364, 2024.participant consent, and adherence to IRB
Collection
2025 Northeast Section Conference
Authors
Srilekha Bandla; Mukesh Reddy Jonnala; Peiqiao Wu; Sarosh Patel; Xingguo Xiong
pharmaceutical treatment, achieving automated epilepsymanagement, potentially leading to more rapid and effective acteristic. The treatment options available to patients withseizure suppression. epilepsy do not work for one-third of people with drug- The implementation utilizes the MPU6050 accelerometer for resistant epilepsy (DRE), thus requiring different therapeuticactivity recognition and AD8232 for ECG activity recognition, approaches [1]. Ethical standards endorse Vagus Nerve Stim-combining these data with ECG readings to minimize false ulation (VNS) as an effective treatment solution for
Collection
2025 Northeast Section Conference
Authors
Marvin Gayle; Danny Mangra
with minimal instructor interaction. All of thisemerging technologies that will engage students more fully are could raise several ethical issues around instructor vs AIhighlighted below [11]. assessments of students. The other challenge arises if the AI is driving the troubleshooting process and thinking through the Virtual and Augmented Reality (VR/AR) Labs. The sets needed to troubleshoot, leaving to a significant reductionhope is that VR and AR tools will become cost