Timothy M. Hale
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Information, Communication & Society | 2015
Laura Robinson; Shelia R. Cotten; Hiroshi Ono; Anabel Quan-Haase; Gustavo S. Mesch; Wenhong Chen; Jeremy Schulz; Timothy M. Hale; Michael J. Stern
While the field of digital inequality continues to expand in many directions, the relationship between digital inequalities and other forms of inequality has yet to be fully appreciated. This article invites social scientists in and outside the field of digital media studies to attend to digital inequality, both as a substantive problem and as a methodological concern. The authors present current research on multiple aspects of digital inequality, defined expansively in terms of access, usage, skills, and self-perceptions, as well as future lines of research. Each of the contributions makes the case that digital inequality deserves a place alongside more traditional forms of inequality in the twenty-first century pantheon of inequalities. Digital inequality should not be only the preserve of specialists but should make its way into the work of social scientists concerned with a broad range of outcomes connected to life chances and life trajectories. As we argue, the significance of digital inequalities is clear across a broad range of individual-level and macro-level domains, including life course, gender, race, and class, as well as health care, politics, economic activity, and social capital.
Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2014
Shelia R. Cotten; George Ford; Sherry Ford; Timothy M. Hale
OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study is to examine the association between Internet use among retired older adults in the United States and changes in a commonly used predictor of depression (the CES-D). METHOD Analyzing data from four waves (2002-2008) of the Health and Retirement Survey, we assess whether an available and commonly used index of a depression state was affected by prior values of the index and Internet use. The sample includes 3,075 respondents observed over 4 waves of data, yielding a total of 12,300 observations. We analyzed the effect on depression of Internet use and past depression in a full sample and a matched sample. We also conducted informal tests for confounders. Finally, we tested a basic mediation model to determine whether Internet use affected depression through its relationship with loneliness and social isolation. RESULTS Across methods, we found a positive contribution of Internet use to mental well-being of retired older adults in the United States, where Internet use reduced the probability of a depression state by one third. We found no evidence of confounding. Some evidence of mediation was found. DISCUSSION Our dynamic probit model indicates that for retired older adults in the United States, Internet use was found to reduce the probability of a depressed state by about 33%. Number of people in the household partially mediates this relationship, with the reduction in depression largest for people living alone. This provides some evidence that the mechanism linking Internet use to depression is the remediation of social isolation and loneliness. Encouraging older adults to use the Internet may help decrease isolation and depression.
npj Digital Medicine | 2018
Lia E. Gracey; Shiyi Zan; Joseph Gracz; John J. Miner; Jacqueline F. Moreau; Jodi Sperber; Kamal Jethwani; Timothy M. Hale; Joseph C. Kvedar
The ubiquity and convenience of smartphones carries great potential for collecting patient-reported data to address many gaps in research, especially those that rely on ongoing, real-time data collection. Health care apps have often suffered from low utility due to lack of consideration of the needs of multiple stakeholders. We employed an iterative user-centered design approach to create the myEczema smartphone application (app) to study the burden of disease of atopic dermatitis. We outline below the steps we took for developing myEczema for multiple stakeholders, including patients, clinicians, and researchers.
Archive | 2011
LaToya J. O'Neal; Timothy M. Hale; Shelia R. Cotten
Archive | 2018
Timothy M. Hale; Wen-Ying Sylvia Chou; Shelia R. Cotten; Aneka Khilnani
Telemedicine Journal and E-health | 2017
Lasse Overballe Nielsen; Hans Jørgen Krebs; Nancy M. Albert; Nick Anderson; Sheryl Catz; Timothy M. Hale; John Hansen; Lise Hounsgaard; Tae Youn Kim; David Lindeman; Helle Spindler; James P. Marcin; Thomas S. Nesbitt; Heather M. Young; Birthe Dinesen
Archive | 2016
Laura Robinson; Jeremy Schulz; Shelia R. Cotten; Timothy M. Hale; Apryl Williams; Joy L. Hightower
Archive | 2015
Laura Robinson; Shelia R. Cotten; Jeremy Schulz; Timothy M. Hale; Apryl Williams
Archive | 2014
Timothy M. Hale; Akhilesh S Pathipati; Shiyi Zan; Kamal Jethwani
Archive | 2014
Timothy M. Hale; Joseph C. Kvedar; McGraw D. For