E
Emilie M. Roth
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 23
Citations - 275
Emilie M. Roth is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognitive ergonomics & Systems design. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 23 publications receiving 217 citations. Previous affiliations of Emilie M. Roth include Brigham and Women's Hospital.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Surgeons' Leadership Styles and Team Behavior in the Operating Room
Yue Yung Hu,Yue Yung Hu,Sarah Henrickson Parker,Stuart R. Lipsitz,Alexander F. Arriaga,Alexander F. Arriaga,Sarah E. Peyre,Sarah E. Peyre,Katherine A. Corso,Emilie M. Roth,Steven Yule,Caprice C. Greenberg,Caprice C. Greenberg +12 more
TL;DR: This work provides a framework for evaluating surgeons' leadership and its impact on team performance in the operating room and suggests that transformational leadership is associated with improved team behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making: An Overview and Future Course
TL;DR: The Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making (JEDM) as discussed by the authors is a peer-reviewed journal that focuses specifically on CEDM as a science and applied discipline, and is intended to meet the need for a journal that covers current research, theory, and practice in ways that not only provide for the sharing of informa- tion across interested parties but also serve to move the field forward.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cognitive engineering and health informatics: Applications and intersections.
TL;DR: An overview of relevant cognitive engineering methods is provided, and how they have been applied to the design of health information technology (HIT) systems is illustrated.
Journal ArticleDOI
Design and Evaluation of an Integrated, Patient-Focused Electronic Health Record Display for Emergency Medicine
Xiaomei Wang,Tracy Kim,Sudeep Hegde,Daniel J. Hoffman,Natalie C. Benda,Ella S. Franklin,David LaVergne,Shawna J. Perry,Rollin J. Fairbanks,A. Zachary Hettinger,Emilie M. Roth,Ann M. Bisantz +11 more
TL;DR: A novel patient-focused status display for emergency medicine was evaluated via a simulation-based study in terms of work-centered usability and usefulness and participants' subjective ratings of usability, usefulness, and support for cognitive objectives were encouraging.
Journal ArticleDOI
Human Factors Design in the Clinical Environment: Development and Assessment of an Interface for Visualizing Emergency Medicine Clinician Workload
Natalie C. Benda,Natalie C. Benda,H. Joseph Blumenthal,A. Zachary Hettinger,A. Zachary Hettinger,Daniel J. Hoffman,David LaVergne,Ella S. Franklin,Ella S. Franklin,Emilie M. Roth,Shawna J. Perry,Ann M. Bisantz +11 more
TL;DR: Evaluation of the algorithm demonstrated that different clinicians have different ways of conceptualizing workload and more sophisticated mechanisms, such as big data mining and machine learning, may be necessary to produce a valid algorithm for calculating clinician workload.