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Carolin Durst

Researcher at Ansbach

Publications -  35
Citations -  210

Carolin Durst is an academic researcher from Ansbach. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social environment & Social network. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 32 publications receiving 159 citations. Previous affiliations of Carolin Durst include University of Bremen & University of Erlangen-Nuremberg.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A holistic approach to strategic foresight: A foresight support system for the German Federal Armed Forces

TL;DR: This article documents and demonstrates the development and implementation of a foresight support system tailored for the German Federal Armed Forces and provides a holistic approach to strategic foresight incorporating the rules of order in foresight processes, foresight method combinations, mechanisms for the reuse of foresight activity results, and collaborative decision-making.
Journal ArticleDOI

Online Social Networks, Social Capital and Health-related Behaviors: A State-of-the-art Analysis

TL;DR: A new Facebook e-health application is proposed to collect longitudinal data using the aforementioned conceptual model and incorporates potential social capital as a special type of social capital in online social networks and uses network-based measures instead of self-reported data.
Book ChapterDOI

Smart Service Canvas – Ein Werkzeug zur strukturierten Beschreibung und Entwicklung von Smart-Service-Geschäftsmodellen

TL;DR: The Smart Service Canvas as mentioned in this paper is ein Werkzeug zur Beschreibung, Analyse, and Entwicklung of Smart-Service-Geschaftsmodellen.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart Service Canvas – A tool for analyzing and designing smart product-service systems

TL;DR: The Smart Service Canvas is introduced as an instrument to analyze and design smart PSS concepts and it is found that the canvas stimulates multi-perspective discussions during service design and that it is helpful in providing a quick overview of asmart PSS.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can Health 2.0 Address Critical Healthcare Challenges? Insights from the Case of How Online Social Networks Can Assist in Combatting the Obesity Epidemic

TL;DR: The possibility of harnessing the appeal of online social networks to address the obesity epidemic currently plaguing society is examined and three factors that influence specific types of health outcomes in the context of obesity are inductively identified.