Woohoo!!! New #SLPhD paper out for @SophieBrassel in JMIR 🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼

Exploring Discussions About Virtual Reality on Twitter to Inform Brain Injury Rehabilitation: Content and Network Analysis
https://www.jmir.org/2024/1/e45168/
Exploring Discussions About Virtual Reality on Twitter to Inform Brain Injury Rehabilitation: Content and Network Analysis

Background: Virtual reality (VR) use in brain injury rehabilitation is emerging. Recommendations for VR development in this field encourage end user engagement to determine the benefits and challenges of VR use; however, existing literature on this topic is limited. Data from social networking sites such as Twitter may further inform development and clinical practice related to the use of VR in brain injury rehabilitation. Objective: This study collected and analyzed VR-related tweets to (1) explore the VR tweeting community to determine topics of conversation and network connections, (2) understand user opinions and experiences of VR, and (3) identify tweets related to VR use in health care and brain injury rehabilitation. Methods: Publicly available tweets containing the hashtags #virtualreality and #VR were collected up to twice weekly during a 6-week period from July 2020 to August 2020 using NCapture (QSR International). The included tweets were analyzed using mixed methods. All tweets were coded using inductive content analysis. Relevant tweets (ie, coded as “VR in health care” or “talking about VR”) were further analyzed using Dann’s content coding. The biographies of users who sent relevant tweets were examined descriptively. Tweet data networks were visualized using Gephi computational analysis. Results: A total of 260,715 tweets were collected, and 70,051 (26.87%) were analyzed following eligibility screening. The sample comprised 33.68% (23,596/70,051) original tweets and 66.32% (46,455/70,051) retweets. Content analysis generated 10 main categories of original tweets related to VR (ie, advertising and promotion, VR content, talking about VR, VR news, general technology, VR industry, VR live streams, VR in health care, VR events, and VR community). Approximately 4.48% (1056/23,596) of original tweets were related to VR use in health care, whereas 0.19% (45/23,596) referred to VR in brain injury rehabilitation. In total, 14.86% (3506/23,596) of original tweets featured commentary on user opinions and experiences of VR applications, equipment, and software. The VR tweeting community comprised a large network of 26,001 unique Twitter users. Users that posted tweets related to “VR in health care” (2124/26,001, 8.17%) did not form an interconnected VR network, whereas many users “talking about VR” (3752/26,001, 14.43%) were connected within a central network. Conclusions: This study provides valuable data on community-based experiences and opinions related to VR. Tweets showcased various VR applications, including in health care, and identified important user-based considerations that can be used to inform VR use in brain injury rehabilitation (eg, technical design, accessibility, and VR sickness). Limited discussions and small user networks related to VR in brain injury rehabilitation reflect the paucity of literature on this topic and the potential underuse of this technology. These findings emphasize that further research is required to understand the specific needs and perspectives of people with brain injuries and clinicians regarding VR use in rehabilitation. Trial Registration:

Journal of Medical Internet Research
Congrats to Maryane Gomez on her most recent #SLPhD publication on the efficacy of the Kaufman Speech to Language Program for childhood #apraxia of speech (with me, Alison Purcell and Kathy Jakileski). https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17549507.2023.2211750

New! My #SLPhD student Rebecca Sullivan has published another #FallsInHospital paper re patients with #Aphasia after #Stroke

Clinical Nursing Research. “Falls in Patients With Communication Disability Secondary to Stroke”
is now published

e-copy is available at https://journals.sagepub.com/eprint/RUHTXJ4RBGEDCVDXENIB/full

https://doi.org/10.1177/10547738221144214

#Stroke #Falls

2/3

Or proudly march to tune of The Rising Lark
#phdlife #SLPhD

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zY3nxbrSrEE

The Rising of the Lark

YouTube

3/3
I passed! The thesis passed!

I’m so happy & absolutely filled with gratitude for all the people who helped, endured, cheered, persisted, shared, steered me on course, read & reviewed, and who are shining the torch to light the paths ahead! 🙏🏼

#phdlife #SLPhD #SLP_SLT

🧵 (sorry, this is a duplicate thread from birdsite)
1/3
I can’t decide whether to dance
#phdlife #SLPhD

https://youtu.be/uaqfvlOs6wo

#Shorts Tom Hiddleston dance rasputin♥️

YouTube
New paper! (my #SLPhD student Rebecca Smith) Perspectives of people with dysphagia and their supporters on the potential for 3D food printing to improve Mealtime-Related quality of life: Disability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology: (early online)
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17483107.2022.2142681
Perspectives of people with dysphagia and their supporters on the potential for 3D food printing to improve Mealtime-Related quality of life

To understand the views of people with dysphagia and their supporters on the feasibility of using 3D food printing to improve the visual appeal of texture-modified foods and their mealtime experien...

Taylor & Francis
New to Mastadon, I've managed to find @tricmc, @speechwoman, & @BronwynHemsley. Hi! 👋🏻
Now I'm looking for more #slpeeps #wespeechies #SLPhD friends 👀