Published on in Vol 5, No 7 (2021): July

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/27891, first published .
Associations Between Physiological Signals Captured Using Wearable Sensors and Self-reported Outcomes Among Adults in Alcohol Use Disorder Recovery: Development and Usability Study

Associations Between Physiological Signals Captured Using Wearable Sensors and Self-reported Outcomes Among Adults in Alcohol Use Disorder Recovery: Development and Usability Study

Associations Between Physiological Signals Captured Using Wearable Sensors and Self-reported Outcomes Among Adults in Alcohol Use Disorder Recovery: Development and Usability Study

JMIR Formative Res: Associations Between Physiological Signals Captured Using Wearable Sensors and Self-reported Ou… https://t.co/LgE7hbnyS7

12:48 PM · Jul 21, 2021

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RT @jmirpub: JMIR Formative Res: Associations Between Physiological Signals Captured Using Wearable Sensors and Self-reported Outcomes Amon…

12:49 PM · Jul 21, 2021

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In their results, Alinia et al. concluded that #EDA & #HRV data from the E4 #sensors corresponded with self-reporte… https://t.co/dOriMHfTHy

3:35 PM · Jan 14, 2022

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RT @empatica: In their results, Alinia et al. concluded that #EDA & #HRV data from the E4 #sensors corresponded with self-reported outcomes…

3:36 PM · Jan 14, 2022

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