Mailings and social media posts of the International Dermoscopy Society were used to recruit targeted groups. The recruitment was focused on medical personell interested in the diagnosis of skin cancer. It is possible that recruitment of raters is influenced by self-selection bias and therefore biased towards the selection of motivated and skilled raters. Skill level was included as a covariate in the interaction experiments. Each rater had to perform multiple screening tests to ensure that the self-reported experience matched actual skills. Because of self selection bias, the generalisability of our results to a less motivated group of readers may be limited.
Ethics oversightEthics review board of the Medical University of Vienna Note that full information on the approval of the study protocol must also be provided in the manuscript.
Technologies associated with the second-generation of the World-Wide Web enable virtually anyone to share their data, documents, observations, and opinions on the Internet. In less than three years, mapping platforms such as Google Maps have sparked an exponential growth in user-generated geographically referenced content. However, the "serious" applications of Web 2.0 are sparse and this paper assesses its use in the context of collaborative spatial decision-making. We present an online map-based discussion forum that enables Internet users to submit place-based comments and respond to contributions from other participants. We further use the geographic references in a thread-based master plan debate for a university campus to simulate this debate in the map-based forum. This allows us to demonstrate how the online map provides an overview of the status and spatial foci of the debate, and how it can help us understand the spatial thought processes of the participants.
Information technology plays a growing role in planning procedures. A procedure step which has not been supported by specific computer tools up to now, is asynchronous discussions. Such discussions can occur in public participation as well as between planners during plan design. In this paper I introduce argumentation models as a way of structuring debates, and review existing tools for recording argumentation. A limited number of tools support design-related or map-related discussions. Their short-comings for analyzing geographically referenced arguments are discussed. Finally, the concept of ‘argumentation maps’ is described, which combine the strengths of rigorous argumentation modeling and detailed geographic location to support map-based discussions in on-line planning.
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