@misc{Matthies2019, author = {Matthies, Christoph}, title = {Feedback in Scrum}, series = {2019 IEEE/ACM 41st International Conference on Software Engineering: Companion Proceedings (ICSE-Companion)}, journal = {2019 IEEE/ACM 41st International Conference on Software Engineering: Companion Proceedings (ICSE-Companion)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-7281-1764-5}, issn = {2574-1934}, doi = {10.1109/ICSE-Companion.2019.00081}, pages = {198 -- 201}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Improving the way that teams work together by reflecting and improving the executed process is at the heart of agile processes. The idea of iterative process improvement takes various forms in different agile development methodologies, e.g. Scrum Retrospectives. However, these methods do not prescribe how improvement steps should be conducted in detail. In this research we investigate how agile software teams can use their development data, such as commits or tickets, created during regular development activities, to drive and track process improvement steps. Our previous research focused on data-informed process improvement in the context of student teams, where controlled circumstances and deep domain knowledge allowed creation and usage of specific process measures. Encouraged by positive results in this area, we investigate the process improvement approaches employed in industry teams. Researching how the vital mechanism of process improvement is implemented and how development data is already being used in practice in modern software development leads to a more complete picture of agile process improvement. It is the first step in enabling a data-informed feedback and improvement process, tailored to a team's context and based on the development data of individual teams.}, language = {en} } @misc{BrandGiese2019, author = {Brand, Thomas and Giese, Holger}, title = {Generic adaptive monitoring based on executed architecture runtime model queries and events}, series = {IEEE Xplore}, journal = {IEEE Xplore}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-7281-2731-6}, issn = {1949-3673}, doi = {10.1109/SASO.2019.00012}, pages = {17 -- 22}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Monitoring is a key functionality for automated decision making as it is performed by self-adaptive systems, too. Effective monitoring provides the relevant information on time. This can be achieved with exhaustive monitoring causing a high overhead consumption of economical and ecological resources. In contrast, our generic adaptive monitoring approach supports effectiveness with increased efficiency. Also, it adapts to changes regarding the information demand and the monitored system without additional configuration and software implementation effort. The approach observes the executions of runtime model queries and processes change events to determine the currently required monitoring configuration. In this paper we explicate different possibilities to use the approach and evaluate their characteristics regarding the phenomenon detection time and the monitoring effort. Our approach allows balancing between those two characteristics. This makes it an interesting option for the monitoring function of self-adaptive systems because for them usually very short-lived phenomena are not relevant.}, language = {en} } @misc{TurnerContrerasVejar2019, author = {Turner, Bryan S. and Contreras-Vejar, Yuri}, title = {Introduction}, series = {Regimes of happiness : comparative and historical studies}, journal = {Regimes of happiness : comparative and historical studies}, publisher = {Anthem Press}, address = {London}, isbn = {978-1-78308-886-7}, pages = {1 -- 8}, year = {2019}, abstract = {This book started as a conversation about successful societies and human development. It was originally based on a simple idea— it would be unusual if, in a society that might be reasonably deemed as successful, its citizens were deeply unhappy. This combination— successful societies and happy citizens— raised immediate and obvious problems. How might one define "success" when dealing, for example, with a society as large and as complex as the United States? We ran into equally major problems when trying to understand "happiness." Yet one constantly hears political analysts talking about the success or failure of various democratic institutions. In ordinary conversations one constantly hears people talking about being happy or unhappy. In the everyday world, conversations about living in a successful society or about being happy do not appear to cause bewilderment or confusion. "Ordinary people" do not appear to find questions like— is your school successful or are you happily married?— meaningless or absurd. Yet, in the social sciences, both "successful societies" and "happy lives" are seen to be troublesome. As our research into happiness and success unfolded, the conundrums we discussed were threefold: societal conditions, measurements and concepts. What are the key social factors that are indispensable for the social and political stability of any given society? Is it possible to develop precise measures of social success that would give us reliable data? There are a range of economic indicators that might be associated with success, such as labor productivity, economic growth rates, low inflation and a robust GDP. Are there equally reliable political and social measures of a successful society and human happiness? For example, rule of law and the absence of large- scale corruption might be relevant to the assessment of societal happiness. These questions about success led us inexorably to what seems to be a futile notion: happiness. Economic variables such as income or psychological measures of well- being in terms of mental health could be easily analyzed; however, happiness is a dimension that has been elusive to the social sciences. In our unfolding conversation, there was also another stream of thought, namely that the social sciences appeared to be more open to the study of human unhappiness rather than happiness.}, language = {en} } @misc{LewisGlajarPetrescu2019, author = {Lewis, Alison and Glajar, Valentina and Petrescu, Corina L.}, title = {Introduction}, series = {Cold War Spy Stories from Eastern Europe}, journal = {Cold War Spy Stories from Eastern Europe}, publisher = {University of Nebraska Press}, address = {Lincoln}, isbn = {978-1-64012-200-0}, pages = {1 -- 26}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{BruechnerRenzKlingbeil2019, author = {Bruechner, Dominik and Renz, Jan and Klingbeil, Mandy}, title = {Creating a Framework for User-Centered Development and Improvement of Digital Education}, series = {Scale}, journal = {Scale}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-6804-9}, doi = {10.1145/3330430.3333644}, pages = {4}, year = {2019}, abstract = {We investigate how the technology acceptance and learning experience of the digital education platform HPI Schul-Cloud (HPI School Cloud) for German secondary school teachers can be improved by proposing a user-centered research and development framework. We highlight the importance of developing digital learning technologies in a user-centered way to take differences in the requirements of educators and students into account. We suggest applying qualitative and quantitative methods to build a solid understanding of a learning platform's users, their needs, requirements, and their context of use. After concept development and idea generation of features and areas of opportunity based on the user research, we emphasize on the application of a multi-attribute utility analysis decision-making framework to prioritize ideas rationally, taking results of user research into account. Afterward, we recommend applying the principle build-learn-iterate to build prototypes in different resolutions while learning from user tests and improving the selected opportunities. Last but not least, we propose an approach for continuous short- and long-term user experience controlling and monitoring, extending existing web- and learning analytics metrics.}, language = {en} } @misc{BiloFriedrichLenzneretal.2019, author = {Bilo, Davide and Friedrich, Tobias and Lenzner, Pascal and Melnichenko, Anna}, title = {Geometric Network Creation Games}, series = {SPAA '19: The 31st ACM Symposium on Parallelism in Algorithms and Architectures}, journal = {SPAA '19: The 31st ACM Symposium on Parallelism in Algorithms and Architectures}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-6184-2}, doi = {10.1145/3323165.3323199}, pages = {323 -- 332}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Network Creation Games are a well-known approach for explaining and analyzing the structure, quality and dynamics of real-world networks like the Internet and other infrastructure networks which evolved via the interaction of selfish agents without a central authority. In these games selfish agents which correspond to nodes in a network strategically buy incident edges to improve their centrality. However, past research on these games has only considered the creation of networks with unit-weight edges. In practice, e.g. when constructing a fiber-optic network, the choice of which nodes to connect and also the induced price for a link crucially depends on the distance between the involved nodes and such settings can be modeled via edge-weighted graphs. We incorporate arbitrary edge weights by generalizing the well-known model by Fabrikant et al. [PODC'03] to edge-weighted host graphs and focus on the geometric setting where the weights are induced by the distances in some metric space. In stark contrast to the state-of-the-art for the unit-weight version, where the Price of Anarchy is conjectured to be constant and where resolving this is a major open problem, we prove a tight non-constant bound on the Price of Anarchy for the metric version and a slightly weaker upper bound for the non-metric case. Moreover, we analyze the existence of equilibria, the computational hardness and the game dynamics for several natural metrics. The model we propose can be seen as the game-theoretic analogue of a variant of the classical Network Design Problem. Thus, low-cost equilibria of our game correspond to decentralized and stable approximations of the optimum network design.}, language = {en} } @misc{Rastogi2019, author = {Rastogi, Abhishake}, title = {Tikhonov regularization with oversmoothing penalty for linear statistical inverse learning problems}, series = {AIP Conference Proceedings : third international Conference of mathematical sciences (ICMS 2019)}, volume = {2183}, journal = {AIP Conference Proceedings : third international Conference of mathematical sciences (ICMS 2019)}, publisher = {American Institute of Physics}, address = {Melville}, isbn = {978-0-7354-1930-8}, issn = {0094-243X}, doi = {10.1063/1.5136221}, pages = {4}, year = {2019}, abstract = {In this paper, we consider the linear ill-posed inverse problem with noisy data in the statistical learning setting. The Tikhonov regularization scheme in Hilbert scales is considered in the reproducing kernel Hilbert space framework to reconstruct the estimator from the random noisy data. We discuss the rates of convergence for the regularized solution under the prior assumptions and link condition. For regression functions with smoothness given in terms of source conditions the error bound can explicitly be established.}, language = {en} } @misc{GonzalezLopezPufahl2019, author = {Gonzalez-Lopez, Fernanda and Pufahl, Luise}, title = {A Landscape for Case Models}, series = {Enterprise, Business-Process and Information Systems Modeling}, volume = {352}, journal = {Enterprise, Business-Process and Information Systems Modeling}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Berlin}, isbn = {978-3-030-20618-5}, issn = {1865-1348}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-20618-5_6}, pages = {87 -- 102}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Case Management is a paradigm to support knowledge-intensive processes. The different approaches developed for modeling these types of processes tend to result in scattered models due to the low abstraction level at which the inherently complex processes are therein represented. Thus, readability and understandability is more challenging than that of traditional process models. By reviewing existing proposals in the field of process overviews and case models, this paper extends a case modeling language - the fragment-based Case Management (fCM) language - with the goal of modeling knowledge-intensive processes from a higher abstraction level - to generate a so-called fCM landscape. This proposal is empirically evaluated via an online experiment. Results indicate that interpreting an fCM landscape might be more effective and efficient than interpreting an informationally equivalent case model.}, language = {en} } @misc{StichBeta2019, author = {Stich, Michael and Beta, Carsten}, title = {Time-Delay Feedback Control of an Oscillatory Medium}, series = {Biological Systems: Nonlinear Dynamics Approach}, volume = {20}, journal = {Biological Systems: Nonlinear Dynamics Approach}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Cham}, isbn = {978-3-030-16585-7}, issn = {2199-3041}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-16585-7_1}, pages = {1 -- 17}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The supercritical Hopf bifurcation is one of the simplest ways in which a stationary state of a nonlinear system can undergo a transition to stable self-sustained oscillations. At the bifurcation point, a small-amplitude limit cycle is born, which already at onset displays a finite frequency. If we consider a reaction-diffusion system that undergoes a supercritical Hopf bifurcation, its dynamics is described by the complex Ginzburg-Landau equation (CGLE). Here, we study such a system in the parameter regime where the CGLE shows spatio-temporal chaos. We review a type of time-delay feedback methods which is suitable to suppress chaos and replace it by other spatio-temporal solutions such as uniform oscillations, plane waves, standing waves, and the stationary state.}, language = {en} } @misc{HickmannPartzschPattbergetal.2019, author = {Hickmann, Thomas and Partzsch, Lena and Pattberg, Philipp H. and Weiland, Sabine}, title = {Introduction}, series = {The Anthropocene Debate and Political Science}, journal = {The Anthropocene Debate and Political Science}, number = {1}, publisher = {Routledge}, address = {London}, isbn = {978-1-351-17412-1}, doi = {10.4324/9781351174121}, pages = {1 -- 12}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Over the past decades, it has become more and more obvious that ongoing globalisation processes have substantial impacts on the natural environment. Studies reveal that intensified global economic relations have caused or accelerated dramatic changes in the Earth system, defined as the sum of our planet's interacting physical, chemical, biological and human processes (Schellnhuber et al. 2004). Climate change, biodiversity loss, disrupted biogeochemical cycles, and land degradation are often cited as emblematic problems of global environmental change (Rockstr{\"o}m et al. 2009; Steffen et al. 2015). In this context, the term Anthropocene has lately received widespread attention and gained some prominence in the academic literature}, language = {en} }