@misc{ZeiherDuchKrolletal.2019, author = {Zeiher, Johannes and Duch, M. and Kroll, Lars Eric and Mensink, Gerhardus Bernardus Maria and Finger, Jonas David and Keil, Thomas}, title = {Domain-specific physical activity patterns and cardiorespiratory fitness among adults in Germany}, series = {The European Journal of Public Health}, volume = {29}, journal = {The European Journal of Public Health}, number = {Supplement. 4}, publisher = {Oxford Univ. Press}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {1101-1262}, pages = {1}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Background Studies show that occupational physical activity (OPA) has less health-enhancing effects than leisure-time physical activity (LTPA). The spare data available suggests that OPA rarely includes aerobic PAs with little or no enhancing effects on cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) as a possible explanation. This study aims to investigate the associations between patterns of OPA and LTPA and CRF among adults in Germany. Methods 1,204 men and 1,303 women (18-64 years), who participated in the German Health Interview and Examination Survey 2008-2011, completed a standardized sub-maximal cycle ergometer test to estimate maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max). Job positions were coded according to the level of physical effort to construct an occupational PA index and categorized as low vs. high OPA. LTPA was assessed via questionnaires and dichotomized in no vs. any LTPA participation. A combined LTPA/OPA variable was used (high OPA/ LTPA, low OPA/LTPA, high OPA/no LTPA, low OPA/no LTPA). Information on potential confounders was obtained via questionnaires (e.g., smoking and education) or physical measurements (e.g., waist circumference). Multi-variable logistic regression was used to analyze associations between OPA/LTPA patterns and VO2max. Results Preliminary analyses showed that less-active men were more likely to have a low VO2max with odds ratios (ORs) of 0.80 for low OPA/LTPA, 1.84 for high OPA/no LTPA and 3.46 for low OPA/no LTPA compared to high OPA/LTPA. The corresponding ORs for women were 1.11 for low OPA/LTPA, 3.99 for high OPA/no LTPA and 2.44 for low OPA/no LTPA, indicating the highest likelihood of low fitness for women working in physically demanding jobs and not engaging in LTPA. Conclusions Findings confirm a strong association between LTPA and CRF and suggest an interaction between OPA and LTPA patterns on CRF within the workforce in Germany. Women without LTPA are at high risk of having a low CRF, especially if they work in physically demanding jobs. Key messages Women not practicing leisure-time physical activity are at risk of having a low cardiorespiratory fitness, especially if they work in physically demanding jobs. Different impact of domains of physical activity should be considered when planning interventions to enhance fitness among the adult population.}, language = {en} } @misc{ZarriessSchlangen2019, author = {Zarriess, Sina and Schlangen, David}, title = {Objects of Unknown Categories}, series = {The 57th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, journal = {The 57th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg}, isbn = {978-1-950737-48-2}, pages = {654 -- 659}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Zero-shot learning in Language \& Vision is the task of correctly labelling (or naming) objects of novel categories. Another strand of work in L\&V aims at pragmatically informative rather than "correct" object descriptions, e.g. in reference games. We combine these lines of research and model zero-shot reference games, where a speaker needs to successfully refer to a novel object in an image. Inspired by models of "rational speech acts", we extend a neural generator to become a pragmatic speaker reasoning about uncertain object categories. As a result of this reasoning, the generator produces fewer nouns and names of distractor categories as compared to a literal speaker. We show that this conversational strategy for dealing with novel objects often improves communicative success, in terms of resolution accuracy of an automatic listener.}, language = {en} } @misc{WippertBlockMansuyetal.2019, author = {Wippert, Pia-Maria and Block, Andrea and Mansuy, Isabelle M. and Peters, Eva M. J. and Rose, Matthias and Rapp, Michael Armin and Huppertz, Alexander and W{\"u}rtz-Kozak, Karin}, title = {Alterations in Bone Homeostasis and Microstructure Related to Depression and Allostatic Load}, series = {Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics}, volume = {88}, journal = {Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics}, number = {6}, publisher = {Karger}, address = {Basel}, issn = {0033-3190}, doi = {10.1159/000503640}, pages = {383 -- 385}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{Wippert2019, author = {Wippert, Pia-Maria}, title = {Stress and bone health}, series = {Psychoneuroendocrinology}, volume = {107}, journal = {Psychoneuroendocrinology}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {0306-4530}, doi = {10.1016/j.psyneuen.2019.07.021}, pages = {8 -- 8}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{WeymarVenturaBortWirkneretal.2019, author = {Weymar, Mathias and Ventura-Bort, Carlos and Wirkner, Janine and Genheimer, Hannah and Wendt, Julia and Hamm, Alfons O.}, title = {Effects of Transcutaneous Vagus Vagus Nerve Stimulation (TVNS) on selective attentions and emotional episodic memory : findings from ERP research}, series = {Psychophysiology : journal of the Society for Psychophysiological Research}, volume = {56}, journal = {Psychophysiology : journal of the Society for Psychophysiological Research}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0048-5772}, doi = {10.1111/psyp.13501}, pages = {S12 -- S12}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Recent research indicates that non- invasive stimulation of the afferent auricular vagal nerve (tVNS) may modulate various cognitive and affec-tive functions, likely via activation of the locus coeruleus- norepinephrine (LC- NE) system. In a series of ERP studies we found that the attention- related P300 component is enhanced during continuous vagal stimula-tion, compared to sham, which is also related to increased salivary alpha amylase levels (a putative indirect marker for central NE activation). In another study, we investigated the effect of continuous tVNS on the late positive potential (LPP), an electrophysiological index for motivated atten-tion toward emotionally evocative cues, and the effects of tVNS on later recognition memory (1- week delay). Here, vagal stimulation prompted earlier LPP differences (300- 500 ms) between unpleasant and neutral scenes. During retrieval, vagal stimulation significantly improved memory performance for unpleasant, but not neutral pictures, compared to sham stimulation, which was also related to enhanced salivary alpha amylase levels. In line, unpleasant images encoded under tVNS compared to sham stimulation also produced enhanced ERP old/new differences (500- 800 ms) during retrieval indicating better recollection. Taken together, our studies suggest that tVNS facilitates attention, learning and episodic memory, likely via afferent projections to the arousal- modulated LC- NE system. We will, however, also show data that point to critical stimulation parameters (likely duration and frequency) that need to be considered when applying tVNS}, language = {en} } @misc{WellenbergWeidesBornhorstetal.2019, author = {Wellenberg, Anna and Weides, L. and Bornhorst, Julia and Crone, Barbara and Karst, U. and Fritz, G. and Honnen, S.}, title = {Molecular and electrophysiological analysis of platinum-induced neurotoxicity using the model organism C. elegans}, series = {Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology}, volume = {392}, journal = {Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {New York}, issn = {0028-1298}, doi = {10.1007/s00210-019-01621-6}, pages = {S63 -- S63}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{WelearegaiSchlueterHammer2019, author = {Welearegai, Gebrehiwet B. and Schlueter, Max and Hammer, Christian}, title = {Static security evaluation of an industrial web application}, series = {Proceedings of the 34th ACM/SIGAPP Symposium on Applied Computing}, journal = {Proceedings of the 34th ACM/SIGAPP Symposium on Applied Computing}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-5933-7}, doi = {10.1145/3297280.3297471}, pages = {1952 -- 1961}, year = {2019}, abstract = {JavaScript is the most popular programming language for web applications. Static analysis of JavaScript applications is highly challenging due to its dynamic language constructs and event-driven asynchronous executions, which also give rise to many security-related bugs. Several static analysis tools to detect such bugs exist, however, research has not yet reported much on the precision and scalability trade-off of these analyzers. As a further obstacle, JavaScript programs structured in Node. js modules need to be collected for analysis, but existing bundlers are either specific to their respective analysis tools or not particularly suitable for static analysis.}, language = {en} } @misc{WarschburgerSproesserLinetal.2019, author = {Warschburger, Petra and Sproesser, Gudrun and Lin, Jiaxi and Zahn, Daniela}, title = {Fachgruppe Gesundheitspsychologie Approbation f{\"u}r psychologische Anwendungsf{\"a}cher}, series = {Psychologische Rundschau : offizielles Organ der Deutschen Gesellschaft f{\"u}r Psychologie}, volume = {70}, journal = {Psychologische Rundschau : offizielles Organ der Deutschen Gesellschaft f{\"u}r Psychologie}, number = {4}, publisher = {Hogrefe}, address = {G{\"o}ttingen}, issn = {0033-3042}, pages = {264 -- 265}, year = {2019}, language = {de} } @misc{Wagner2019, author = {Wagner, Dieter}, title = {Editorial}, series = {Journal of East European management studies : JEEMS}, volume = {24}, journal = {Journal of East European management studies : JEEMS}, number = {1}, publisher = {Nomos}, address = {Baden-Baden}, issn = {0949-6181}, doi = {10.5771/0949-6181-2019-1-3}, pages = {3 -- 3}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{UllrichEnkeTeichmannetal.2019, author = {Ullrich, Andre and Enke, Judith and Teichmann, Malte and Kress, Antonio and Gronau, Norbert}, title = {Audit - and then what?}, series = {Procedia Manufacturing}, volume = {31}, journal = {Procedia Manufacturing}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {2351-9789}, doi = {10.1016/j.promfg.2019.03.025}, pages = {162 -- 168}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Current trends such as digital transformation, Internet of Things, or Industry 4.0 are challenging the majority of learning factories. Regardless of whether a conventional learning factory, a model factory, or a digital learning factory, traditional approaches such as the monotonous execution of specific instructions don't suffice the learner's needs, market requirements as well as especially current technological developments. Contemporary teaching environments need a clear strategy, a road to follow for being able to successfully cope with the changes and develop towards digitized learning factories. This demand driven necessity of transformation leads to another obstacle: Assessing the status quo and developing and implementing adequate action plans. Within this paper, details of a maturity-based audit of the hybrid learning factory in the Research and Application Centre Industry 4.0 and a thereof derived roadmap for the digitization of a learning factory are presented.}, 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{TrappDoellner2019, author = {Trapp, Matthias and D{\"o}llner, J{\"u}rgen Roland Friedrich}, title = {Interactive Close-Up Rendering for Detail plus Overview Visualization of 3D Digital Terrain Models}, series = {2019 23rd International Conference Information Visualisation (IV)}, journal = {2019 23rd International Conference Information Visualisation (IV)}, editor = {Banissi, E Ursyn}, publisher = {Inst. of Electr. and Electronics Engineers}, address = {Los Alamitos}, isbn = {978-1-7281-2838-2}, issn = {2375-0138}, doi = {10.1109/IV.2019.00053}, pages = {275 -- 280}, year = {2019}, abstract = {This paper presents an interactive rendering technique for detail+overview visualization of 3D digital terrain models using interactive close-ups. A close-up is an alternative presentation of input data varying with respect to geometrical scale, mapping, appearance, as well as Level-of-Detail (LOD) and Level-of-Abstraction (LOA) used. The presented 3D close-up approach enables in-situ comparison of multiple Regionof-Interests (ROIs) simultaneously. We describe a GPU-based rendering technique for the image-synthesis of multiple close-ups in real-time.}, language = {en} } @misc{TrappDoellner2019, author = {Trapp, Matthias and D{\"o}llner, J{\"u}rgen Roland Friedrich}, title = {Real-time Screen-space Geometry Draping for 3D Digital Terrain Models}, series = {2019 23rd International Conference Information Visualisation (IV)}, journal = {2019 23rd International Conference Information Visualisation (IV)}, publisher = {Inst. of Electr. and Electronics Engineers}, address = {Los Alamitos}, isbn = {978-1-7281-2838-2}, issn = {2375-0138}, doi = {10.1109/IV.2019.00054}, pages = {281 -- 286}, year = {2019}, abstract = {A fundamental task in 3D geovisualization and GIS applications is the visualization of vector data that can represent features such as transportation networks or land use coverage. Mapping or draping vector data represented by geometric primitives (e.g., polylines or polygons) to 3D digital elevation or 3D digital terrain models is a challenging task. We present an interactive GPU-based approach that performs geometry-based draping of vector data on per-frame basis using an image-based representation of a 3D digital elevation or terrain model only.}, language = {en} } @misc{ThomasSabbahRappetal.2019, author = {Thomas, Christine and Sabbah, Patricia and Rapp, Michael Armin and Eschweiler, Gerhard}, title = {The Perioperative Care of Older Patients}, series = {Deutsches {\"A}rzteblatt international : a weekly online journal of clinical medicine and public health}, volume = {116}, journal = {Deutsches {\"A}rzteblatt international : a weekly online journal of clinical medicine and public health}, number = {21}, publisher = {Dt. {\"A}rzte-Verl.}, address = {Cologne}, issn = {1866-0452}, doi = {10.3238/arztebl.2019.0373a}, pages = {373 -- 373}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{ThiekenBubeckRieseetal.2019, author = {Thieken, Annegret Henriette and Bubeck, Philip and Riese, Miriam and Ulbrich, Uwe and Kind, Christian and Kaiser, Theresa}, title = {Foreword Heavy Rain Risk Management in Germany}, series = {Hydrologie und Wasserbewirtschaftung}, volume = {63}, journal = {Hydrologie und Wasserbewirtschaftung}, number = {4}, publisher = {Bundesanstalt f{\"u}r Gew{\"a}sserkunde}, address = {Koblenz}, issn = {1439-1783}, pages = {192 -- 192}, year = {2019}, language = {de} } @misc{TeichmannUllrichGronau2019, author = {Teichmann, Malte and Ullrich, Andre and Gronau, Norbert}, title = {Subject-oriented learning}, series = {Procedia Manufacturing}, volume = {31}, journal = {Procedia Manufacturing}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {2351-9789}, doi = {10.1016/j.promfg.2019.03.012}, pages = {72 -- 78}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The transformation to a digitized company changes not only the work but also social context for the employees and requires inter alia new knowledge and skills from them. Additionally, individual action problems arise. This contribution proposes the subject-oriented learning theory, in which the employees´ action problems are the starting point of training activities in learning factories. In this contribution, the subject-oriented learning theory is exemplified and respective advantages for vocational training in learning factories are pointed out both theoretically and practically. Thereby, especially the individual action problems of learners and the infrastructure are emphasized as starting point for learning processes and competence development.}, language = {en} } @misc{SukmanaTorkuraGraupneretal.2019, author = {Sukmana, Muhammad Ihsan Haikal and Torkura, Kennedy A. and Graupner, Hendrik and Cheng, Feng and Meinel, Christoph}, title = {Unified Cloud Access Control Model for Cloud Storage Broker}, series = {33rd International Conference on Information Networking (ICOIN 2019)}, journal = {33rd International Conference on Information Networking (ICOIN 2019)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {Los Alamitos}, isbn = {978-1-5386-8350-7}, issn = {1976-7684}, doi = {10.1109/ICOIN.2019.8717982}, pages = {60 -- 65}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Cloud Storage Broker (CSB) provides value-added cloud storage service for enterprise usage by leveraging multi-cloud storage architecture. However, it raises several challenges for managing resources and its access control in multiple Cloud Service Providers (CSPs) for authorized CSB stakeholders. In this paper we propose unified cloud access control model that provides the abstraction of CSP's services for centralized and automated cloud resource and access control management in multiple CSPs. Our proposal offers role-based access control for CSB stakeholders to access cloud resources by assigning necessary privileges and access control list for cloud resources and CSB stakeholders, respectively, following privilege separation concept and least privilege principle. We implement our unified model in a CSB system called CloudRAID for Business (CfB) with the evaluation result shows it provides system-and-cloud level security service for cfB and centralized resource and access control management in multiple CSPs.}, language = {en} } @misc{StoltnowSeifertJeskeetal.2019, author = {Stoltnow, Malte and Seifert, Thomas and Jeske, Tilman J. and Gilbricht, Sabine and Krause, Joachim}, title = {Contributions to the mineralogical and geochemical characterization of Fe-Sn-Zn-Cu-In skarn-type mineralization in the Schwarzenberg mining district, Germany}, series = {Life with Ore Deposits on Earth - 15th SGA Biennial Meeting 2019}, journal = {Life with Ore Deposits on Earth - 15th SGA Biennial Meeting 2019}, publisher = {SGA Soc Geology Applied mineral depositis}, address = {Geneva}, pages = {1089 -- 1092}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The Schwarzenberg mining district in the western Erzgebirge hosts numerous skarn-hosted tin-polymetallic deposits, such as Breitenbrunn. The St. Christoph mine is located in the Breitenbrunn deposit and is the locus typicus of christophite, an iron-rich sphalerite variety, which can be associated with indium enrichment. This study presents a revision of the paragenetic scheme, a contribution to the indium behavior and potential, and discussion on the origin of the sulfur. This was achieved through reflected light microscopy, SEM-based MLA, EPMA, and bulk mineral sulfur isotope analysis on 37 sulfide-rich skarn samples from a mineral collection. The paragenetic scheme includes: a pre-mineralization stage of anhydrous calc-silicates and hydrous minerals; an oxide stage, dominated by magnetite; a sulfide stage of predominantly sphalerite, minor pyrite, chalcopyrite, arsenopyrite, and galena. Some sphalerite samples present elevated indium contents of up to 0.44 wt\%. Elevated iron contents (4-10 wt\%) in sphalerite can be tentatively linked to increased indium incorporation, but further analyses are required. Analyzed sulfides exhibit homogeneous delta S-34 values (-1 to +2 parts per thousand VCDT), assumed to be post-magmatic. They correlate with other Fe-Sn-Zn-Cu-In skarn deposits in the western Erzgebirge, and Permian vein-hosted associations throughout the Erzgebirge region.}, 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{StaubitzTeusnerMeinel2019, author = {Staubitz, Thomas and Teusner, Ralf and Meinel, Christoph}, title = {MOOCs in Secondary Education}, series = {2019 IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON)}, journal = {2019 IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-9506-7}, issn = {2165-9567}, doi = {10.1109/EDUCON.2019.8725138}, pages = {173 -- 182}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Computer science education in German schools is often less than optimal. It is only mandatory in a few of the federal states and there is a lack of qualified teachers. As a MOOC (Massive Open Online Course) provider with a German background, we developed the idea to implement a MOOC addressing pupils in secondary schools to fill this gap. The course targeted high school pupils and enabled them to learn the Python programming language. In 2014, we successfully conducted the first iteration of this MOOC with more than 7000 participants. However, the share of pupils in the course was not quite satisfactory. So we conducted several workshops with teachers to find out why they had not used the course to the extent that we had imagined. The paper at hand explores and discusses the steps we have taken in the following years as a result of these workshops.}, language = {en} } @misc{StaubitzMeinel2019, author = {Staubitz, Thomas and Meinel, Christoph}, title = {Graded Team Assignments in MOOCs}, series = {SCALE}, journal = {SCALE}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-6804-9}, doi = {10.1145/3330430.3333619}, pages = {10}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The ability to work in teams is an important skill in today's work environments. In MOOCs, however, team work, team tasks, and graded team-based assignments play only a marginal role. To close this gap, we have been exploring ways to integrate graded team-based assignments in MOOCs. Some goals of our work are to determine simple criteria to match teams in a volatile environment and to enable a frictionless online collaboration for the participants within our MOOC platform. The high dropout rates in MOOCs pose particular challenges for team work in this context. By now, we have conducted 15 MOOCs containing graded team-based assignments in a variety of topics. The paper at hand presents a study that aims to establish a solid understanding of the participants in the team tasks. Furthermore, we attempt to determine which team compositions are particularly successful. Finally, we examine how several modifications to our platform's collaborative toolset have affected the dropout rates and performance of the teams.}, language = {en} } @misc{SowemimoBorcherdsKnoxBrownetal.2019, author = {Sowemimo, Oluwakemi and Borcherds, Wade and Knox-Brown, Patrick and Rindfleisch, Tobias and Thalhammer, Anja and Daughdrill, Gary}, title = {Evolution of Transient Helicity and Disorder in Late Embryogenesis Abundant Protein COR15A}, series = {Biophysical journal}, volume = {116}, journal = {Biophysical journal}, number = {3}, publisher = {Cell Press}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {0006-3495}, doi = {10.1016/j.bpj.2018.11.2553}, pages = {473A -- 473A}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Cold regulated protein 15A (COR15A) is a nuclear encoded, intrinsically disordered protein that is found in Arabidopsis thaliana. It belongs to the Late Embryogenesis Abundant (LEA) family of proteins and is responsible for increased freezing tolerance in plants. COR15A is intrinsically disordered in dilute solutions and adopts a helical structure upon dehydration or in the presence of co-solutes such as TFE and ethylene glycol. This helical structure is thought to be important for protecting plants from dehydration induced by freezing. Multiple protein sequence alignments revealed the presence of several conserved glycine residues that we hypothesize keeps COR15A from becoming helical in dilute solutions. Using AGADIR, the change in helical content of COR15A when these conserved glycine residues were mutated to alanine residues was predicted. Based on the predictions, glycine to alanine mutants were made at position 68, and 54,68,81, and 84. Labeled samples of wildtype COR15A and mutant proteins were purified and NMR experiments were performed to examine any structural changes induced by the mutations. To test the effects of dehydration on the structure of COR15A, trifluoroethanol, an alcohol based co solvent that is proposed to induce/stabilize helical structure in peptides was added to the NMR samples, and the results of the experiment showed an increase in helical content, compared to the samples without TFE. To test the functional differences between wild type and the mutants, liposome leakage assays were performed. The results from these assays suggest the more helical mutants may augment membrane stability.}, language = {en} } @misc{SianiparWillemsMeinel2019, author = {Sianipar, Johannes Harungguan and Willems, Christian and Meinel, Christoph}, title = {Virtual machine integrity verification in Crowd-Resourcing Virtual Laboratory}, series = {2018 IEEE 11th Conference on Service-Oriented Computing and Applications (SOCA)}, journal = {2018 IEEE 11th Conference on Service-Oriented Computing and Applications (SOCA)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-9133-5}, issn = {2163-2871}, doi = {10.1109/SOCA.2018.00032}, pages = {169 -- 176}, year = {2019}, abstract = {In cloud computing, users are able to use their own operating system (OS) image to run a virtual machine (VM) on a remote host. The virtual machine OS is started by the user using some interfaces provided by a cloud provider in public or private cloud. In peer to peer cloud, the VM is started by the host admin. After the VM is running, the user could get a remote access to the VM to install, configure, and run services. For the security reasons, the user needs to verify the integrity of the running VM, because a malicious host admin could modify the image or even replace the image with a similar image, to be able to get sensitive data from the VM. We propose an approach to verify the integrity of a running VM on a remote host, without using any specific hardware such as Trusted Platform Module (TPM). Our approach is implemented on a Linux platform where the kernel files (vmlinuz and initrd) could be replaced with new files, while the VM is running. kexec is used to reboot the VM with the new kernel files. The new kernel has secret codes that will be used to verify whether the VM was started using the new kernel files. The new kernel is used to further measuring the integrity of the running VM.}, language = {en} } @misc{SianiparSukmanaMeinel2019, author = {Sianipar, Johannes Harungguan and Sukmana, Muhammad Ihsan Haikal and Meinel, Christoph}, title = {Moving sensitive data against live memory dumping, spectre and meltdown attacks}, series = {26th International Conference on Systems Engineering (ICSEng)}, journal = {26th International Conference on Systems Engineering (ICSEng)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-7834-3}, pages = {8}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The emergence of cloud computing allows users to easily host their Virtual Machines with no up-front investment and the guarantee of always available anytime anywhere. But with the Virtual Machine (VM) is hosted outside of user's premise, the user loses the physical control of the VM as it could be running on untrusted host machines in the cloud. Malicious host administrator could launch live memory dumping, Spectre, or Meltdown attacks in order to extract sensitive information from the VM's memory, e.g. passwords or cryptographic keys of applications running in the VM. In this paper, inspired by the moving target defense (MTD) scheme, we propose a novel approach to increase the security of application's sensitive data in the VM by continuously moving the sensitive data among several memory allocations (blocks) in Random Access Memory (RAM). A movement function is added into the application source code in order for the function to be running concurrently with the application's main function. Our approach could reduce the possibility of VM's sensitive data in the memory to be leaked into memory dump file by 2 5\% and secure the sensitive data from Spectre and Meltdown attacks. Our approach's overhead depends on the number and the size of the sensitive data.}, language = {en} } @misc{ShakiFischer2019, author = {Shaki, Samuel and Fischer, Martin H.}, title = {Commentary on: E. H. Toomarian ; E. M. Hubbard, On the genesis of spatial-numerical associations: Evolutionary and cultural factors co-construct the mental number line. - (Neuroscience \& Biobehavioral Reviews. - vol 95, 2018, pg 189 - 190)}, series = {Neuroscience \& biobehavioral reviews : official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society}, volume = {98}, journal = {Neuroscience \& biobehavioral reviews : official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {0149-7634}, doi = {10.1016/j.neubiorev.2018.12.018}, pages = {335 -- 335}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{SeidelKrentzMeinel2019, author = {Seidel, Felix and Krentz, Konrad-Felix and Meinel, Christoph}, title = {Deep En-Route Filtering of Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) Messages on 6LoWPAN Border Routers}, series = {2019 IEEE 5th World Forum on Internet of Things (WF-IoT)}, journal = {2019 IEEE 5th World Forum on Internet of Things (WF-IoT)}, publisher = {Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-4980-0}, doi = {10.1109/WF-IoT.2019.8767262}, pages = {201 -- 206}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Devices on the Internet of Things (IoT) are usually battery-powered and have limited resources. Hence, energy-efficient and lightweight protocols were designed for IoT devices, such as the popular Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP). Yet, CoAP itself does not include any defenses against denial-of-sleep attacks, which are attacks that aim at depriving victim devices of entering low-power sleep modes. For example, a denial-of-sleep attack against an IoT device that runs a CoAP server is to send plenty of CoAP messages to it, thereby forcing the IoT device to expend energy for receiving and processing these CoAP messages. All current security solutions for CoAP, namely Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS), IPsec, and OSCORE, fail to prevent such attacks. To fill this gap, Seitz et al. proposed a method for filtering out inauthentic and replayed CoAP messages "en-route" on 6LoWPAN border routers. In this paper, we expand on Seitz et al.'s proposal in two ways. First, we revise Seitz et al.'s software architecture so that 6LoWPAN border routers can not only check the authenticity and freshness of CoAP messages, but can also perform a wide range of further checks. Second, we propose a couple of such further checks, which, as compared to Seitz et al.'s original checks, more reliably protect IoT devices that run CoAP servers from remote denial-of-sleep attacks, as well as from remote exploits. We prototyped our solution and successfully tested its compatibility with Contiki-NG's CoAP implementation.}, language = {en} } @misc{SchuettRothkegelTrukenbrodetal.2019, author = {Sch{\"u}tt, Heiko Herbert and Rothkegel, Lars Oliver Martin and Trukenbrod, Hans Arne and Engbert, Ralf and Wichmann, Felix A.}, title = {Predicting fixation densities over time from early visual processing}, series = {Perception}, volume = {48}, journal = {Perception}, publisher = {Sage Publ.}, address = {London}, issn = {0301-0066}, pages = {64 -- 65}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Bottom-up saliency is often cited as a factor driving the choice of fixation locations of human observers, based on the (partial) success of saliency models to predict fixation densities in free viewing. However, these observations are only weak evidence for a causal role of bottom-up saliency in natural viewing behaviour. To test bottom-up saliency more directly, we analyse the performance of a number of saliency models---including our own saliency model based on our recently published model of early visual processing (Sch{\"u}tt \& Wichmann, 2017, JoV)---as well as the theoretical limits for predictions over time. On free viewing data our model performs better than classical bottom-up saliency models, but worse than the current deep learning based saliency models incorporating higher-level information like knowledge about objects. However, on search data all saliency models perform worse than the optimal image independent prediction. We observe that the fixation density in free viewing is not stationary over time, but changes over the course of a trial. It starts with a pronounced central fixation bias on the first chosen fixation, which is nonetheless influenced by image content. Starting with the 2nd to 3rd fixation, the fixation density is already well predicted by later densities, but more concentrated. From there the fixation distribution broadens until it reaches a stationary distribution around the 10th fixation. Taken together these observations argue against bottom-up saliency as a mechanistic explanation for eye movement control after the initial orienting reaction in the first one to two saccades, although we confirm the predictive value of early visual representations for fixation locations. The fixation distribution is, first, not well described by any stationary density, second, is predicted better when including object information and, third, is badly predicted by any saliency model in a search task.}, language = {en} } @misc{SchwetlickTrukenbrodEngbert2019, author = {Schwetlick, Lisa and Trukenbrod, Hans Arne and Engbert, Ralf}, title = {The Influence of Visual Long Term Memory on Eye Movements During Scene Viewing}, series = {Perception}, volume = {48}, journal = {Perception}, number = {S1}, publisher = {Sage Publ.}, address = {London}, issn = {0301-0066}, pages = {138 -- 138}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{Schorsch2019, author = {Schorsch, Jonathan}, title = {Olive Oil, Anointing, Ecstasy, and Ecology}, series = {Ritual Dynamics in Jewish and Christian Contexts : Between Bible and Liturgy}, volume = {34}, journal = {Ritual Dynamics in Jewish and Christian Contexts : Between Bible and Liturgy}, publisher = {Brill}, address = {Leiden}, isbn = {978-90-04-40595-0}, issn = {1388-2074}, doi = {10.1163/9789004405950_012}, pages = {215 -- 236}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{SchlosserKossmannBoissier2019, author = {Schlosser, Rainer and Kossmann, Jan and Boissier, Martin}, title = {Efficient Scalable Multi-Attribute Index Selection Using Recursive Strategies}, series = {2019 IEEE 35th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE)}, journal = {2019 IEEE 35th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-7474-1}, issn = {1084-4627}, doi = {10.1109/ICDE.2019.00113}, pages = {1238 -- 1249}, year = {2019}, abstract = {An efficient selection of indexes is indispensable for database performance. For large problem instances with hundreds of tables, existing approaches are not suitable: They either exhibit prohibitive runtimes or yield far from optimal index configurations by strongly limiting the set of index candidates or not handling index interaction explicitly. We introduce a novel recursive strategy that does not exclude index candidates in advance and effectively accounts for index interaction. Using large real-world workloads, we demonstrate the applicability of our approach. Further, we evaluate our solution end to end with a commercial database system using a reproducible setup. We show that our solutions are near-optimal for small index selection problems. For larger problems, our strategy outperforms state-of-the-art approaches in both scalability and solution quality.}, language = {en} } @misc{SalzwedelVoellerReibis2019, author = {Salzwedel, Annett and V{\"o}ller, Heinz and Reibis, Rona Katharina}, title = {Vocational reintegration in coronary heart disease patients - the holistic approach of the WHO biopsychosocial concept}, series = {European journal of preventive cardiology : the official ESC journal for primary \& secondary cardiovascular prevention, rehabilitation and sports cardiology}, volume = {26}, journal = {European journal of preventive cardiology : the official ESC journal for primary \& secondary cardiovascular prevention, rehabilitation and sports cardiology}, number = {13}, publisher = {Sage Publ.}, address = {London}, issn = {2047-4873}, doi = {10.1177/2047487319850699}, pages = {1383 -- 1385}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{RoederVogtWilliam2019, author = {R{\"o}der, Katrin and Vogt-William, Christine}, title = {Shame and shamelessness in Anglophone literature and media}, series = {European journal of English studies : official journal of the European Society for the Study of English (ESSE)}, volume = {23}, journal = {European journal of English studies : official journal of the European Society for the Study of English (ESSE)}, number = {3}, publisher = {Routledge, Taylor \& Francis Group}, address = {Abingdon}, issn = {1382-5577}, doi = {10.1080/13825577.2019.1655242}, pages = {239 -- 248}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{RounsevellMetzgerWalz2019, author = {Rounsevell, Mark D. A. and Metzger, Marc J. and Walz, Ariane}, title = {Operationalising ecosystem services in Europe}, series = {Regional environmental change}, volume = {19}, journal = {Regional environmental change}, number = {8}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Heidelberg}, issn = {1436-3798}, doi = {10.1007/s10113-019-01560-1}, pages = {2143 -- 2149}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{RoumenShigeyamaRudolphetal.2019, author = {Roumen, Thijs and Shigeyama, Jotaro and Rudolph, Julius Cosmo Romeo and Grzelka, Felix and Baudisch, Patrick}, title = {SpringFit}, series = {User Interface Software and Technology}, journal = {User Interface Software and Technology}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-6816-2}, doi = {10.1145/3332165.3347930}, pages = {727 -- 738}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Joints are crucial to laser cutting as they allow making three-dimensional objects; mounts are crucial because they allow embedding technical components, such as motors. Unfortunately, mounts and joints tend to fail when trying to fabricate a model on a different laser cutter or from a different material. The reason for this lies in the way mounts and joints hold objects in place, which is by forcing them into slightly smaller openings. Such "press fit" mechanisms unfortunately are susceptible to the small changes in diameter that occur when switching to a machine that removes more or less material ("kerf"), as well as to changes in stiffness, as they occur when switching to a different material. We present a software tool called springFit that resolves this problem by replacing the problematic press fit-based mounts and joints with what we call cantilever-based mounts and joints. A cantilever spring is simply a long thin piece of material that pushes against the object to be held. Unlike press fits, cantilever springs are robust against variations in kerf and material; they can even handle very high variations, simply by using longer springs. SpringFit converts models in the form of 2D cutting plans by replacing all contained mounts, notch joints, finger joints, and t-joints. In our technical evaluation, we used springFit to convert 14 models downloaded from the web.}, language = {en} } @misc{RodriguezSillkeSteinhoffBojarskietal.2019, author = {Rodriguez-Sillke, Yasmina and Steinhoff, U. and Bojarski, Christian and Lissner, Donata and Schumann, Michael and Branchi, F. and Siegmund, Britta and Glauben, Rainer}, title = {Deep immune profiling of human Peyer´s Patches in patients of inflammatory bowel diseases}, series = {European journal of immunology}, volume = {49}, journal = {European journal of immunology}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {0014-2980}, doi = {10.1002/eji.201970300}, pages = {203 -- 204}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{Richly2019, author = {Richly, Keven}, title = {A survey on trajectory data management for hybrid transactional and analytical workloads}, series = {IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data)}, journal = {IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-5035-6}, issn = {2639-1589}, doi = {10.1109/BigData.2018.8622394}, pages = {562 -- 569}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Rapid advances in location-acquisition technologies have led to large amounts of trajectory data. This data is the foundation for a broad spectrum of services driven and improved by trajectory data mining. However, for hybrid transactional and analytical workloads, the storing and processing of rapidly accumulated trajectory data is a non-trivial task. In this paper, we present a detailed survey about state-of-the-art trajectory data management systems. To determine the relevant aspects and requirements for such systems, we developed a trajectory data mining framework, which summarizes the different steps in the trajectory data mining process. Based on the derived requirements, we analyze different concepts to store, compress, index, and process spatio-temporal data. There are various trajectory management systems, which are optimized for scalability, data footprint reduction, elasticity, or query performance. To get a comprehensive overview, we describe and compare different exciting systems. Additionally, the observed similarities in the general structure of different systems are consolidated in a general blueprint of trajectory management systems.}, language = {en} } @misc{Richly2019, author = {Richly, Keven}, title = {Leveraging spatio-temporal soccer data to define a graphical query language for game recordings}, series = {IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data)}, journal = {IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-5035-6}, issn = {2639-1589}, doi = {10.1109/BigData.2018.8622159}, pages = {3456 -- 3463}, year = {2019}, abstract = {For professional soccer clubs, performance and video analysis are an integral part of the preparation and post-processing of games. Coaches, scouts, and video analysts extract information about strengths and weaknesses of their team as well as opponents by manually analyzing video recordings of past games. Since video recordings are an unstructured data source, it is a complex and time-intensive task to find specific game situations and identify similar patterns. In this paper, we present a novel approach to detect patterns and situations (e.g., playmaking and ball passing of midfielders) based on trajectory data. The application uses the metaphor of a tactic board to offer a graphical query language. With this interactive tactic board, the user can model a game situation or mark a specific situation in the video recording for which all matching occurrences in various games are immediately displayed, and the user can directly jump to the corresponding game scene. Through the additional visualization of key performance indicators (e.g.,the physical load of the players), the user can get a better overall assessment of situations. With the capabilities to find specific game situations and complex patterns in video recordings, the interactive tactic board serves as a useful tool to improve the video analysis process of professional sports teams.}, language = {en} } @misc{RenzMeinel2019, author = {Renz, Jan and Meinel, Christoph}, title = {The "Bachelor Project"}, series = {2019 IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON)}, journal = {2019 IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-9506-7}, issn = {2165-9567}, doi = {10.1109/EDUCON.2019.8725140}, pages = {580 -- 587}, year = {2019}, abstract = {One of the challenges of educating the next generation of computer scientists is to teach them to become team players, that are able to communicate and interact not only with different IT systems, but also with coworkers and customers with a non-it background. The "bachelor project" is a project based on team work and a close collaboration with selected industry partners. The authors hosted some of the teams since spring term 2014/15. In the paper at hand we explain and discuss this concept and evaluate its success based on students' evaluation and reports. Furthermore, the technology-stack that has been used by the teams is evaluated to understand how self-organized students in IT-related projects work. We will show that and why the bachelor is the most successful educational format in the perception of the students and how this positive results can be improved by the mentors.}, language = {en} } @misc{ReinertGoetze2019, author = {Reinert, Bastian and G{\"o}tze, Clemens}, title = {Einleitung: Intertextualit{\"a}t - Korrelationen - Korrespondenzen}, series = {Elfriede Jelinek und Thomas Bernhard : Intertextualit{\"a}t - Korrelationen - Korrespondenzen}, volume = {154}, journal = {Elfriede Jelinek und Thomas Bernhard : Intertextualit{\"a}t - Korrelationen - Korrespondenzen}, publisher = {De Gruyter}, address = {Berlin}, isbn = {978-3-11-063267-5}, doi = {10.1515/9783110632675-001}, pages = {1 -- 9}, year = {2019}, language = {de} } @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{RadchukKramerSchadtGrimm2019, author = {Radchuk, Viktoriia and Kramer-Schadt, Stephanie and Grimm, Volker}, title = {Transferability of mechanistic ecological models is about emergence}, series = {Trends in ecology and evolution}, volume = {34}, journal = {Trends in ecology and evolution}, number = {6}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {London}, issn = {0169-5347}, doi = {10.1016/j.tree.2019.01.010}, pages = {487 -- 488}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{PerezChaparroMayerBeckendorf2019, author = {P{\´e}rez Chaparro, Camilo Germ{\´a}n Alberto and Mayer, Frank and Beckendorf, Claudia}, title = {Cardiovascular drift response over two different constant-load exercises in healthy non-athletes}, series = {Medicine and science in sports and exercise : official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine}, volume = {51}, journal = {Medicine and science in sports and exercise : official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine}, number = {6}, publisher = {Lippincott Williams \& Wilkins}, address = {Philadelphia}, issn = {0195-9131}, doi = {10.1249/01.mss.0000561495.15163.50}, pages = {329 -- 329}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Cardiovascular drift (CV-d) is a steady increase in heart rate (HR) over time while performing constant load moderate intensity exercise (CME) > 20 min. CV-d presents problems for the prescription of exercise intensity by means of HR, because the work rate (WR) during exercise must be adjusted to maintain target HR, thus disturbing the intended effect of the exercise intervention. It has been shown that the increase in HR during CME is due to changes in WR and not to CV-d.}, language = {en} } @misc{Przybylla2019, author = {Przybylla, Mareen}, title = {Interactive objects in physical computing and their role in the learning process}, series = {Constructivist foundations}, volume = {14}, journal = {Constructivist foundations}, number = {3}, publisher = {Vrije Univ.}, address = {Bussels}, issn = {1782-348X}, pages = {264 -- 266}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The target article discusses the question of how educational makerspaces can become places supportive of knowledge construction. This question is too often neglected by people who run makerspaces, as they mostly explain how to use different tools and focus on the creation of a product. In makerspaces, often pupils also engage in physical computing activities and thus in the creation of interactive artifacts containing embedded systems, such as smart shoes or wristbands, plant monitoring systems or drink mixing machines. This offers the opportunity to reflect on teaching physical computing in computer science education, where similarly often the creation of the product is so strongly focused upon that the reflection of the learning process is pushed into the background.}, language = {en} } @misc{PonceSchererBoekstegersetal.2019, author = {Ponce, Carol Barahona and Scherer, Dominique and Boekstegers, Felix and Garate-Calderon, Valentina and Jenab, Mazda and Aleksandrova, Krasimira and Katzke, Verena and Weiderpass, Elisabete and Bonet, Catalina and Moradi, Tahereh and Fischer, Krista and Bossers, Willem and Brenner, Hermann and Sch{\"o}ttker, Ben and Holleczek, Bernd and Hveem, Kristian and Eklund, Niina and Voelker, Uwe and Waldenberger, Melanie and Bermejo, Justo Lorenzo}, title = {Arsenic and gallbladder cancer risk}, series = {International journal of cancer}, volume = {146}, journal = {International journal of cancer}, number = {9}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0020-7136}, doi = {10.1002/ijc.32837}, pages = {2648 -- 2650}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{PodlesnyKayemMeinel2019, author = {Podlesny, Nikolai Jannik and Kayem, Anne V. D. M. and Meinel, Christoph}, title = {Attribute Compartmentation and Greedy UCC Discovery for High-Dimensional Data Anonymisation}, series = {Proceedings of the Ninth ACM Conference on Data and Application Security and Privacy}, journal = {Proceedings of the Ninth ACM Conference on Data and Application Security and Privacy}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-6099-9}, doi = {10.1145/3292006.3300019}, pages = {109 -- 119}, year = {2019}, abstract = {High-dimensional data is particularly useful for data analytics research. In the healthcare domain, for instance, high-dimensional data analytics has been used successfully for drug discovery. Yet, in order to adhere to privacy legislation, data analytics service providers must guarantee anonymity for data owners. In the context of high-dimensional data, ensuring privacy is challenging because increased data dimensionality must be matched by an exponential growth in the size of the data to avoid sparse datasets. Syntactically, anonymising sparse datasets with methods that rely of statistical significance, makes obtaining sound and reliable results, a challenge. As such, strong privacy is only achievable at the cost of high information loss, rendering the data unusable for data analytics. In this paper, we make two contributions to addressing this problem from both the privacy and information loss perspectives. First, we show that by identifying dependencies between attribute subsets we can eliminate privacy violating attributes from the anonymised dataset. Second, to minimise information loss, we employ a greedy search algorithm to determine and eliminate maximal partial unique attribute combinations. Thus, one only needs to find the minimal set of identifying attributes to prevent re-identification. Experiments on a health cloud based on the SAP HANA platform using a semi-synthetic medical history dataset comprised of 109 attributes, demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach.}, language = {en} } @misc{PlankYeallandMicelietal.2019, author = {Plank, Roswitha and Yealland, Guy and Miceli, Enrico and Cunha, Dulce Lima and Graff, Patrick and Thomforde, Sari and Gruber, Robert and Moosbrugger-Martinz, Verena and Eckl, Katja and Calderon, Marcelo and Hennies, Hans Christian and Hedtrich, Sarah}, title = {Transglutaminase 1 Replacement Therapy Successfully Mitigates the Autosomal Recessive Congenital Ichthyosis Phenotype in Full-Thickness Skin Disease Equivalents}, series = {The journal of investigative dermatology}, volume = {139}, journal = {The journal of investigative dermatology}, number = {5}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {New York}, issn = {0022-202X}, doi = {10.1016/j.jid.2018.11.002}, pages = {1191 -- 1195}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{PetrukKuzyoOrlandoetal.2019, author = {Petruk, Oleh and Kuzyo, T. and Orlando, S. and Pohl, Martin and Miceli, M. and Bocchino, F. and Beshley, V. and Brose, Robert}, title = {Erratum: Post-adiabatic supernova remnants in an interstellar magnetic field: oblique shocks and non-uniform environment. - (Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. - 479, (2018), pg. 4253 - 4270)}, series = {Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society}, volume = {482}, journal = {Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society}, number = {2}, publisher = {Oxford Univ. Press}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {0035-8711}, doi = {10.1093/mnras/sty2861}, pages = {1979 -- 1980}, year = {2019}, abstract = {This is a correction notice for 'Post-adiabatic supernova remnants in an interstellar magnetic field: oblique shocks and non-uniform environment' (DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty1750), which was published in MNRAS 479, 4253-4270 (2018). The publisher regrets to inform that the colour was missing from the colour scales in Figs 8(a)-(d) and Figs 9(a) and (b). This has now been corrected online. The publisher apologizes for this error.}, language = {en} } @misc{PerscheidUflacker2019, author = {Perscheid, Cindy and Uflacker, Matthias}, title = {Integrating Biological Context into the Analysis of Gene Expression Data}, series = {Distributed Computing and Artificial Intelligence, Special Sessions, 15th International Conference}, volume = {801}, journal = {Distributed Computing and Artificial Intelligence, Special Sessions, 15th International Conference}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Cham}, isbn = {978-3-319-99608-0}, issn = {2194-5357}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-99608-0_41}, pages = {339 -- 343}, year = {2019}, abstract = {High-throughput RNA sequencing produces large gene expression datasets whose analysis leads to a better understanding of diseases like cancer. The nature of RNA-Seq data poses challenges to its analysis in terms of its high dimensionality, noise, and complexity of the underlying biological processes. Researchers apply traditional machine learning approaches, e. g. hierarchical clustering, to analyze this data. Until it comes to validation of the results, the analysis is based on the provided data only and completely misses the biological context. However, gene expression data follows particular patterns - the underlying biological processes. In our research, we aim to integrate the available biological knowledge earlier in the analysis process. We want to adapt state-of-the-art data mining algorithms to consider the biological context in their computations and deliver meaningful results for researchers.}, language = {en} } @misc{OfnerStober2019, author = {Ofner, Andre and Stober, Sebastian}, title = {Hybrid variational predictive coding as a bridge between human and artificial cognition}, series = {ALIFE 2019: The 2019 Conference on Artificial Life}, journal = {ALIFE 2019: The 2019 Conference on Artificial Life}, publisher = {MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge}, pages = {68 -- 69}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Predictive coding and its generalization to active inference offer a unified theory of brain function. The underlying predictive processing paradigmhas gained significant attention in artificial intelligence research for its representation learning and predictive capacity. Here, we suggest that it is possible to integrate human and artificial generative models with a predictive coding network that processes sensations simultaneously with the signature of predictive coding found in human neuroimaging data. We propose a recurrent hierarchical predictive coding model that predicts low-dimensional representations of stimuli, electroencephalogram and physiological signals with variational inference. We suggest that in a shared environment, such hybrid predictive coding networks learn to incorporate the human predictive model in order to reduce prediction error. We evaluate the model on a publicly available EEG dataset of subjects watching one-minute long video excerpts. Our initial results indicate that the model can be trained to predict visual properties such as the amount, distance and motion of human subjects in videos.}, language = {en} } @misc{NumbergerDreierVullioudetal.2019, author = {Numberger, Daniela and Dreier, Carola and Vullioud, Colin and Gabriel, Guelsah and Greenwood, Alex D. and Grossart, Hans-Peter}, title = {Correction: Recovery of influenza A viruses from lake water and sediments by experimental inoculation (vol 14, e0216880, 2019)}, series = {PLoS one}, volume = {14}, journal = {PLoS one}, number = {6}, publisher = {PLoS}, address = {San Fransisco}, issn = {1932-6203}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0218882}, pages = {1}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{NitzeGrosseJonesetal.2019, author = {Nitze, Ingmar and Grosse, Guido and Jones, B. M. and Romanovsky, Vladimir E. and Boike, Julia}, title = {Author Correction: Nitze, I; Grosse, G; Jones, B.M.; Romanovsky, V.E.; Boike, J.: Remote sensing quantifies widespread abundance of permafrost region disturbances across the Arctic and Subarctic. - Nature Communications. - 9 (2018), 5423}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {10}, journal = {Nature Communications}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {2041-1723}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-019-08375-y}, pages = {1}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{NiskanenFondellSahleetal.2019, author = {Niskanen, Johannes and Fondell, Mattis and Sahle, Christoph J. and Eckert, Sebastian Oliver and Jay, Raphael Martin and Gilmore, Keith and Pietzsch, Annette and Dantz, Marcus and Lu, Xingye and McNally, Daniel E. and Schmitt, Thorsten and Vaz da Cruz, Vinicius and Kimberg, Victor and F{\"o}hlisch, Alexander}, title = {Reply to Pettersson et al.: Why X-ray spectral features are compatible to continuous distribution models in ambient water}, series = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America}, volume = {116}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America}, number = {35}, publisher = {National Acad. of Sciences}, address = {Washington}, issn = {0027-8424}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1909551116}, pages = {17158 -- 17159}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{NguyenWangRychkovetal.2019, author = {Nguyen, Quyet Doan and Wang, Jingwen and Rychkov, Dmitry and Gerhard, Reimund}, title = {Depth Profile and Transport of Positive and Negative Charge in Surface (2-D) and Bulk (3-D) Nanocomposite Films}, series = {2nd International Conference on Electrical Materials and Power Equipment (ICEMPE 2019)}, journal = {2nd International Conference on Electrical Materials and Power Equipment (ICEMPE 2019)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-8434-4}, doi = {10.1109/ICEMPE.2019.8727256}, pages = {298 -- 300}, year = {2019}, abstract = {In the present study, the charge distribution and the charge transport across the thickness of 2- and 3-dimensional polymer nanodielectrics was investigated. Chemically surface-treated polypropylene (PP) films and low-density polyethylene nanocomposite films with 3 wt \% of magnesium oxide (LDPE/MgO) served as examples of 2-D and 3-D nanodielectrics, respectively. Surface charges were deposited onto the non-metallized surfaces of the one-side metallized polymer films and found to broaden and to thus enter the bulk of the films upon thermal stimulation at suitable elevated temperatures. The resulting space-charge profiles in the thickness direction were probed by means of Piezoelectrically-generated Pressure Steps (PPSs). It was observed that the chemical surface treatment of PP which led to the formation of nano-structures or the use of bulk nanoparticles from LDPE/MgO nanocomposites enhance charge trapping on or in the respective polymer films and also reduce charge transport inside the respective samples.}, language = {en} } @misc{NakatenKempka2019, author = {Nakaten, Natalie Christine and Kempka, Thomas}, title = {Retraction: Techno-Economic Comparison of Onshore and Offshore Underground Coal Gasification End-Product Competitiveness. (Retraction of Vol 10, art no 1643, 2017)}, series = {Energies : open-access journal of related scientific research, technology development and studies in policy and management}, volume = {12}, journal = {Energies : open-access journal of related scientific research, technology development and studies in policy and management}, number = {17}, publisher = {MDPI}, address = {Basel}, issn = {1996-1073}, doi = {10.3390/en12173253}, pages = {1}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{MuellerSchoellKloppSchulzeHuisingaetal.2019, author = {M{\"u}ller-Sch{\"o}ll, A. and Klopp-Schulze, Lena and Huisinga, Wilhelm and J{\"o}rger, M. and Neven, P. and Koolen, S. L. and Mathijssen, R. H. J. and Schmidt, S. and Kloft, Charlotte}, title = {Patient-tailored tamoxifen dosing based on an increased quantitative understanding of its complex pharmacokinetics: A novel integrative modelling approach}, series = {Annals of Oncology}, volume = {30}, journal = {Annals of Oncology}, publisher = {Oxford Univ. Press}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {0923-7534}, pages = {1}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{MyachykovFischer2019, author = {Myachykov, Andriy and Fischer, Martin H.}, title = {A hierarchical view of abstractness}, series = {Physics of life reviews}, volume = {29}, journal = {Physics of life reviews}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {1571-0645}, doi = {10.1016/j.plrev.2019.04.005}, pages = {161 -- 163}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{MogaRobinsonLeimkuehler2019, author = {Moga, A. and Robinson, T. and Leimk{\"u}hler, Silke}, title = {Towards reconstituting a biosynthetic pathway within compartmentalized GUVs}, series = {European biophysics journal : with biophysics letters ; an international journal of biophysics}, volume = {48}, journal = {European biophysics journal : with biophysics letters ; an international journal of biophysics}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {New York}, issn = {0175-7571}, pages = {S218 -- S218}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{Miklashevsky2019, author = {Miklashevsky, Alex A.}, title = {Words as social tools}, series = {Physics of life reviews}, volume = {29}, journal = {Physics of life reviews}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {1571-0645}, doi = {10.1016/j.plrev.2019.04.002}, pages = {164 -- 165}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{Matthies2019, author = {Matthies, Christoph}, title = {Agile process improvement in retrospectives}, series = {41st International Conference on Software Engineering: Companion Proceedings (ICSE-Companion)}, journal = {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.2019.00063}, pages = {150 -- 152}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Working in iterations and repeatedly improving team workflows based on collected feedback is fundamental to agile software development processes. Scrum, the most popular agile method, provides dedicated retrospective meetings to reflect on the last development iteration and to decide on process improvement actions. However, agile methods do not prescribe how these improvement actions should be identified, managed or tracked in detail. The approaches to detect and remove problems in software development processes are therefore often based on intuition and prior experiences and perceptions of team members. Previous research in this area has focused on approaches to elicit a team's improvement opportunities as well as measurements regarding the work performed in an iteration, e.g. Scrum burn-down charts. Little research deals with the quality and nature of identified problems or how progress towards removing issues is measured. In this research, we investigate how agile development teams in the professional software industry organize their feedback and process improvement approaches. In particular, we focus on the structure and content of improvement and reflection meetings, i.e. retrospectives, and their outcomes. Researching how the vital mechanism of process improvement is implemented in practice in modern software development leads to a more complete picture of agile process improvement.}, language = {en} } @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{MarweckiWilsonOfeketal.2019, author = {Marwecki, Sebastian and Wilson, Andrew D. and Ofek, Eyal and Franco, Mar Gonzalez and Holz, Christian}, title = {Mise-Unseen}, series = {UIST '19: Proceedings of the 32nd Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology}, journal = {UIST '19: Proceedings of the 32nd Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-6816-2}, doi = {10.1145/3332165.3347919}, pages = {777 -- 789}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Creating or arranging objects at runtime is needed in many virtual reality applications, but such changes are noticed when they occur inside the user's field of view. We present Mise-Unseen, a software system that applies such scene changes covertly inside the user's field of view. Mise-Unseen leverages gaze tracking to create models of user attention, intention, and spatial memory to determine if and when to inject a change. We present seven applications of Mise-Unseen to unnoticeably modify the scene within view (i) to hide that task difficulty is adapted to the user, (ii) to adapt the experience to the user's preferences, (iii) to time the use of low fidelity effects, (iv) to detect user choice for passive haptics even when lacking physical props, (v) to sustain physical locomotion despite a lack of physical space, (vi) to reduce motion sickness during virtual locomotion, and (vii) to verify user understanding during story progression. We evaluated Mise-Unseen and our applications in a user study with 15 participants and find that while gaze data indeed supports obfuscating changes inside the field of view, a change is rendered unnoticeably by using gaze in combination with common masking techniques.}, language = {en} } @misc{LucknerDunsingDruekeetal.2019, author = {Luckner, Madlen and Dunsing, Valentin and Dr{\"u}ke, Markus and Zuehlke, B. and Petazzi, Roberto Arturo and Chiantia, Salvatore and Herrmann, A.}, title = {Quantifying protein oligomerization directly in living cells}, series = {European biophysics journal : with biophysics letters ; an international journal of biophysics}, volume = {48}, journal = {European biophysics journal : with biophysics letters ; an international journal of biophysics}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {New York}, issn = {0175-7571}, pages = {S183 -- S183}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{LouposDamigosTsertouetal.2019, author = {Loupos, Konstantinos and Damigos, Yannis and Tsertou, Athanasisa and Amditis, Angelos and Lenas, Sotiris-Angelos and Chatziandreoglou, Chistos and Malliou, Christina and Tsaoussidis, Vassilis and Gerhard, Reimund and Rychkov, Dmitry and Wirges, Werner and Frankenstein, Bernd and Camarinopoulos, Stephanos and Kalidromitis, Vassilis and Sanna, C. and Maier, Stephanos and Gordt, A. and Panetsos, P.}, title = {Innovative soft-material sensor, wireless network and assessment software for bridge life-cycle assessment}, series = {Life-cycle analysis and assessmanet in civil engineering : towards an integrated vision}, journal = {Life-cycle analysis and assessmanet in civil engineering : towards an integrated vision}, publisher = {CRC Press, Taylor \& Francis Group}, address = {Boca Raton}, isbn = {978-1-315-22891-4}, pages = {2085 -- 2092}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Nowadays, structural health monitoring of critical infrastructures is considered as of primal importance especially for managing transport infrastructure however most current SHM methodologies are based on point-sensors that show various limitations relating to their spatial positioning capabilities, cost of development and measurement range. This publication describes the progress in the SENSKIN EC co-funded research project that is developing a dielectric-elastomer sensor, formed from a large highly extensible capacitance sensing membrane and is supported by an advanced micro-electronic circuitry, for monitoring transport infrastructure bridges. The sensor under development provides spatial measurements of strain in excess of 10\%, while the sensing system is being designed to be easy to install, require low power in operation concepts, require simple signal processing, and have the ability to self-monitor and report. An appropriate wireless sensor network is also being designed and developed supported by local gateways for the required data collection and exploitation. SENSKIN also develops a Decision-Support-System (DSS) for proactive condition-based structural interventions under normal operating conditions and reactive emergency intervention following an extreme event. The latter is supported by a life-cycle-costing (LCC) and life-cycle-assessment (LCA) module responsible for the total internal and external costs for the identified bridge rehabilitation, analysis of options, yielding figures for the assessment of the economic implications of the bridge rehabilitation work and the environmental impacts of the bridge rehabilitation options and of the associated secondary effects respectively. The overall monitoring system will be evaluated and benchmarked on actual bridges of Egnatia Highway (Greece) and Bosporus Bridge (Turkey).}, language = {en} } @misc{LopezTarazonBronstertThiekenetal.2019, author = {Lopez Tarazon, Jos{\´e} Andr{\´e}s and Bronstert, Axel and Thieken, Annegret Henriette and Petrow, Theresia}, title = {The effects of global change on floods, fluvial geomorphology and related hazards in mountainous rivers}, series = {The science of the total environment : an international journal for scientific research into the environment and its relationship with man}, volume = {669}, journal = {The science of the total environment : an international journal for scientific research into the environment and its relationship with man}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {0048-9697}, doi = {10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.03.026}, pages = {7 -- 10}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{LohseSixtusLonnemann2019, author = {Lohse, Karoline and Sixtus, Elena and Lonnemann, Jan}, title = {Thinking about time and number}, series = {Behavioral and brain sciences : an international journal of current research and theory with open peer commentary}, volume = {42}, journal = {Behavioral and brain sciences : an international journal of current research and theory with open peer commentary}, publisher = {Cambridge Univ. Press}, address = {New York}, issn = {0140-525X}, doi = {10.1017/S0140525X19000475}, pages = {2}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Based on the notion that time, space, and number are part of a generalized magnitude system, we assume that the dual-systems approach to temporal cognition also applies to numerical cognition. Referring to theoretical models of the development of numerical concepts, we propose that children's early skills in processing numbers can be described analogously to temporal updating and temporal reasoning.}, language = {en} } @misc{LiedhegenerKoestersBrechenmacher2019, author = {Liedhegener, Antonius and K{\"o}sters, Christoph and Brechenmacher, Thomas}, title = {Catholicism}, series = {Historisches Jahrbuch}, volume = {139}, journal = {Historisches Jahrbuch}, publisher = {Herder}, address = {Freiburg Breisgau}, issn = {0018-2621}, pages = {601 -- 618}, year = {2019}, 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{LewandowskyCowtanRisbeyetal.2019, author = {Lewandowsky, Stephan and Cowtan, Kevin and Risbey, James S. and Mann, Michael E. and Steinman, Byron A. and Oreskes, Naomi and Rahmstorf, Stefan}, title = {Erratum: The 'pause' in global warming in historical context: II. Comparing models to observations (Environmental research letters. - Vol 13, (2018) 123007)}, series = {Environmental research letters}, volume = {14}, journal = {Environmental research letters}, number = {4}, publisher = {IOP Publ. Ltd.}, address = {Bristol}, issn = {1748-9326}, doi = {10.1088/1748-9326/aafbb7}, pages = {2}, year = {2019}, abstract = {We review the evidence for a putative early 21st-century divergence between global mean surface temperature (GMST) and Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) projections. We provide a systematic comparison between temperatures and projections using historical versions of GMST products and historical versions of model projections that existed at the times when claims about a divergence were made. The comparisons are conducted with a variety of statistical techniques that correct for problems in previous work, including using continuous trends and a Monte Carlo approach to simulate internal variability. The results show that there is no robust statistical evidence for a divergence between models and observations. The impression of a divergence early in the 21st century was caused by various biases in model interpretation and in the observations, and was unsupported by robust statistics.}, language = {en} } @misc{LeproNagelKlumppetal.2019, author = {Lepro, Valentino and Nagel, Oliver and Klumpp, Stefan and Lipowsky, Reinhard and Beta, Carsten}, title = {Cooperative Transport by Amoeboid Cells}, series = {Biophysical journal}, volume = {116}, journal = {Biophysical journal}, number = {3}, publisher = {Cell Press}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {0006-3495}, doi = {10.1016/j.bpj.2018.11.682}, pages = {122A -- 122A}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{LentonRockstroemGaffneyetal.2019, author = {Lenton, Timothy M. and Rockstroem, Johan and Gaffney, Owen and Rahmstorf, Stefan and Richardson, Katherine and Steffen, Will and Schellnhuber, Hans Joachim}, title = {Climate tipping points - too risky to bet against : Comment}, series = {Nature : the international weekly journal of science}, volume = {575}, journal = {Nature : the international weekly journal of science}, number = {7784}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {0028-0836}, doi = {10.1038/d41586-019-03595-0}, pages = {592 -- 595}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{LazarianYan2019, author = {Lazarian, Alexander and Yan, Huirong}, title = {Erratum: Superdiffusion of Cosmic Rays: Implications for Cosmic Ray Acceleration (The American Astronomical Society. - Vol. 784, (2014), 38)}, series = {The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics}, volume = {885}, journal = {The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics}, number = {2}, publisher = {IOP Publ. Ltd.}, address = {Bristol}, issn = {0004-637X}, doi = {10.3847/1538-4357/ab50ba}, pages = {1}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Diffusion of cosmic rays (CRs) is the key process for understanding their propagation and acceleration. We employ the description of spatial separation of magnetic field lines in magnetohydrodynamic turbulence in Lazarian \& Vishniac to quantify the divergence of the magnetic field on scales less than the injection scale of turbulence and show that this divergence induces superdiffusion of CR in the direction perpendicular to the mean magnetic field. The perpendicular displacement squared increases, not as the distance x along the magnetic field, which is the case for a regular diffusion, but as the x 3 for freely streaming CRs. The dependence changes to x 3/2 for the CRs propagating diffusively along the magnetic field. In the latter case, we show that it is important to distinguish the perpendicular displacement with respect to the mean field and to the local magnetic field. We consider how superdiffusion changes the acceleration of CRs in shocks and show how it decreases efficiency of the CRs acceleration in perpendicular shocks. We also demonstrate that in the case when the small-scale magnetic field is generated in the pre-shock region, an efficient acceleration can take place for the CRs streaming without collisions along the magnetic loops.}, language = {en} } @misc{KoenigWeymarFriedman2019, author = {K{\"o}nig, Julian and Weymar, Mathias and Friedman, Bruce}, title = {Beyond Observation: Transcutaneous Vagus Nerve Stimulation in Psychophysiological Research}, series = {Psychophysiology : journal of the Society for Psychophysiological Research}, volume = {56}, journal = {Psychophysiology : journal of the Society for Psychophysiological Research}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0048-5772}, doi = {10.1111/psyp.13439}, pages = {S11 -- S11}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{KubatovaHamannKubatetal.2019, author = {Kubatova, Brankica and Hamann, Wolf-Rainer and Kubat, Jiri and Oskinova, Lida}, title = {3D Monte Carlo Radiative Transfer in Inhomogeneous Massive Star Winds}, series = {Radiative signatures from the cosmos}, volume = {519}, journal = {Radiative signatures from the cosmos}, publisher = {Astronomical soc pacific}, address = {San Fransisco}, isbn = {978-1-58381-925-8}, issn = {1050-3390}, pages = {209 -- 212}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Already for decades it has been known that the winds of massive stars are inhomogeneous (i.e. clumped). To properly model observed spectra of massive star winds it is necessary to incorporate the 3-D nature of clumping into radiative transfer calculations. In this paper we present our full 3-D Monte Carlo radiative transfer code for inhomogeneous expanding stellar winds. We use a set of parameters to describe dense as well as the rarefied wind components. At the same time, we account for non-monotonic velocity fields. We show how the 3-D density and velocity wind inhomogeneities strongly affect the resonance line formation. We also show how wind clumping can solve the discrepancy between P v and H alpha mass-loss rate diagnostics.}, language = {en} } @misc{Kraemer2019, author = {Kr{\"a}mer, Felicitas}, title = {Perspectives on embryo donation}, series = {Bioethics}, volume = {33}, journal = {Bioethics}, number = {6}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0269-9702}, doi = {10.1111/bioe.12636}, pages = {634 -- 636}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{KruseKaoudiQuianeRuizetal.2019, author = {Kruse, Sebastian and Kaoudi, Zoi and Quiane-Ruiz, Jorge-Arnulfo and Chawla, Sanjay and Naumann, Felix and Contreras-Rojas, Bertty}, title = {Optimizing Cross-Platform Data Movement}, series = {2019 IEEE 35th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE)}, journal = {2019 IEEE 35th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-7474-1}, issn = {1084-4627}, doi = {10.1109/ICDE.2019.00162}, pages = {1642 -- 1645}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Data analytics are moving beyond the limits of a single data processing platform. A cross-platform query optimizer is necessary to enable applications to run their tasks over multiple platforms efficiently and in a platform-agnostic manner. For the optimizer to be effective, it must consider data movement costs across different data processing platforms. In this paper, we present the graph-based data movement strategy used by RHEEM, our open-source cross-platform system. In particular, we (i) model the data movement problem as a new graph problem, which we prove to be NP-hard, and (ii) propose a novel graph exploration algorithm, which allows RHEEM to discover multiple hidden opportunities for cross-platform data processing.}, language = {en} } @misc{KrawietzGoebelAlbrechtetal.2019, author = {Krawietz, Marian and Goebel, Jan and Albrecht, Sophia and Class, Fabian and Kohler, Ulrich}, title = {Leben in der ehemaligen DDR}, publisher = {German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin)}, address = {Berlin}, doi = {10.5684/soep.ddr18}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{KrauseKloftHuisingaetal.2019, author = {Krause, Andreas and Kloft, Charlotte and Huisinga, Wilhelm and Karlsson, Mats and Pinheiro, Jos{\´e} and Bies, Robert and Rogers, James and Mentr{\´e}, France and Musser, Bret J.}, title = {Comment on Jaki et al., A proposal for a new PhD level curriculum on quantitative methods for drug development}, series = {Pharmaceutical statistics : the journal of applied statistics in the pharmaceutical industry}, volume = {18}, journal = {Pharmaceutical statistics : the journal of applied statistics in the pharmaceutical industry}, number = {3}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Hoboken}, organization = {ASA Special Interest Grp Stat Phar ASA Special Interest Grp Stat Phar}, issn = {1539-1604}, pages = {278 -- 281}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{KovacsIonLopesetal.2019, author = {Kovacs, Robert and Ion, Alexandra and Lopes, Pedro and Oesterreich, Tim and Filter, Johannes and Otto, Philip and Arndt, Tobias and Ring, Nico and Witte, Melvin and Synytsia, Anton and Baudisch, Patrick}, title = {TrussFormer}, series = {The 31st Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology}, journal = {The 31st Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-5971-9}, doi = {10.1145/3290607.3311766}, pages = {1}, year = {2019}, abstract = {We present TrussFormer, an integrated end-to-end system that allows users to 3D print large-scale kinetic structures, i.e., structures that involve motion and deal with dynamic forces. TrussFormer builds on TrussFab, from which it inherits the ability to create static large-scale truss structures from 3D printed connectors and PET bottles. TrussFormer adds movement to these structures by placing linear actuators into them: either manually, wrapped in reusable components called assets, or by demonstrating the intended movement. TrussFormer verifies that the resulting structure is mechanically sound and will withstand the dynamic forces resulting from the motion. To fabricate the design, TrussFormer generates the underlying hinge system that can be printed on standard desktop 3D printers. We demonstrate TrussFormer with several example objects, including a 6-legged walking robot and a 4m-tall animatronics dinosaur with 5 degrees of freedom.}, language = {en} } @misc{KleinpeterShainyan2019, author = {Kleinpeter, Erich and Shainyan, Bagrat A.}, title = {Very low-temperature dynamic Si-29 NMR study of the conformational equilibrium of (1,1-phenyl-1,1-silacyclohex-1-yl)disiloxane}, series = {Magnetic resonance in chemistry}, volume = {57}, journal = {Magnetic resonance in chemistry}, number = {6}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0749-1581}, doi = {10.1002/mrc.4870}, pages = {317 -- 319}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{KalkuhlSteckelMontroneetal.2019, author = {Kalkuhl, Matthias and Steckel, Jan Christoph and Montrone, Lorenzo and Jakob, Michael and Peters, J{\"o}rg and Edenhofer, Ottmar}, title = {Successful coal phase-out requires new models of development}, series = {Nature Energy}, volume = {4}, journal = {Nature Energy}, number = {11}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {2058-7546}, doi = {10.1038/s41560-019-0500-5}, pages = {897 -- 900}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Different energy sources have different spillovers on economic development and industrialization. Pathways of economic development based on renewable energy sources might require additional policies to support industrial development.}, language = {en} } @misc{HoelzleBjoerkVisscher2019, author = {H{\"o}lzle, Katharina and Bj{\"o}rk, Jennie and Visscher, Klaasjan}, title = {Editorial}, series = {Creativity and innovation management}, volume = {28}, journal = {Creativity and innovation management}, number = {1}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0963-1690}, doi = {10.1111/caim.12307}, pages = {3 -- 4}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The new year starts and many of us have right away been burdened with conference datelines, grant proposal datelines, teaching obligations, paper revisions and many other things. While being more or less successful in fulfilling To-Do lists and ticking of urgent (and sometimes even important) things, we often feel that our ability to be truly creative or innovative is rather restrained by this (external pressure). With this, we are not alone. Many studies have shown that stress does influence overall work performance and satisfaction. Furthermore, more and more students and entry-levels look for work-life balance and search for employers that offer a surrounding and organization considering these needs. High-Tech and start-up companies praise themselves for their "Feel-Good managers" or Yoga programs. But is this really helpful? Is there indeed a relationship between stress, adverse work environment and creativity or innovation? What are the supporting factors in a work environment that lets employees be more creative? What kind of leadership do we need for innovative behaviour and to what extent can an organization create support structures that reduce the stress we feel? The first issue of Creativity and Innovation Management in 2019 gives some first answers to these questions and hopefully some food for thought. The first paper written by Dirk De Clercq, and Imanol Belausteguigoitia starts with the question which impact work overload has on creative behaviour. The authors look at how employees' perceptions of work overload reduces their creative behaviour. While they find empirical proof for this relationship, they can also show that the effect is weaker with higher levels of passion for work, emotion sharing, and organizational commitment. The buffering effects of emotion sharing and organizational commitment are particularly strong when they are combined with high levels of passion for work. Their findings give first empirical proof that organizations can and should take an active role in helping their employees reducing the effects of adverse work conditions in order to become or stay creative. However, not only work overload is harming creative behaviour, also the fear of losing one's job has detrimental effects on innovative work behaviour. Anahi van Hootegem, Wendy Niesen and Hans de Witte verify that stress and adverse environmental conditions shape our perception of work. Using threat rigidity theory and an empirical study of 394 employees, they show that the threat of job loss impairs employees' innovativeness through increased irritation and decreased concentration. Organizations can help their employees coping better with this insecurity by communicating more openly and providing different support structures. Support often comes from leadership and the support of the supervisor can clearly shape an employee's motivation to show creative behaviour. Wenjing Cai, Evgenia Lysova, Bart A. G. Bossink, Svetlana N. Khapova and Weidong Wang report empirical findings from a large-scale survey in China where they find that supervisor support for creativity and job characteristics effectively activate individual psychological capital associated with employee creativity. On a slight different notion, Gisela B{\"a}cklander looks at agile practices in a very well-known High Tech firm. In "Doing Complexity Leadership Theory: How agile coaches at Spotify practice enabling leadership", she researches the role of agile coaches and how they practice enabling leadership, a key balancing force in complexity leadership. She finds that the active involvement of coaches in observing group dynamics, surfacing conflict and facilitating and encouraging constructive dialogue leads to a positive working environment and the well-being of employees. Quotes from the interviews suggest that the flexible structure provided by the coaches may prove a fruitful way to navigate and balance autonomy and alignment in organizations. The fifth paper of Frederik Anseel, Michael Vandamme, Wouter Duyck and Eric Rietzchel goes a little further down this road and researches how groups can be motivated better to select truly creative ideas. We know from former studies that groups often perform rather poorly when it comes to selecting creative ideas for implementation. The authors find in an extensive field experiment that under conditions of high epistemic motivation, proself motivated groups select significantly more creative and original ideas than prosocial groups. They conclude however, that more research is needed to understand better why these differences occur. The prosocial behaviour of groups is also the theme of Karin Moser, Jeremy F. Dawson and Michael A. West's paper on "Antecedents of team innovation in health care teams". They look at team-level motivation and how a prosocial team environment, indicated by the level of helping behaviour and information-sharing, may foster innovation. Their results support the hypotheses of both information-sharing and helping behaviour on team innovation. They suggest that both factors may actually act as buffer against constraints in team work, such as large team size or high occupational diversity in cross-functional health care teams, and potentially turn these into resources supporting team innovation rather than acting as barriers. Away from teams and onto designing favourable work environments, the seventh paper of Ferney Osorio, Laurent Dupont, Mauricio Camargo, Pedro Palominos, Jose Ismael Pena and Miguel Alfaro looks into innovation laboratories. Although several studies have tackled the problem of design, development and sustainability of these spaces for innovation, there is still a gap in understanding how the capabilities and performance of these environments are affected by the strategic intentions at the early stages of their design and functioning. The authors analyse and compare eight existing frameworks from literature and propose a new framework for researchers and practitioners aiming to assess or to adapt innovation laboratories. They test their framework in an exploratory study with fifteen laboratories from five different countries and give recommendations for the future design of these laboratories. From design to design thinking goes our last paper from Rama Krishna Reddy Kummitha on "Design Thinking in Social Organisations: Understanding the role of user engagement" where she studies how users persuade social organisations to adopt design thinking. Looking at four social organisations in India during 2008 to 2013, she finds that the designer roles are blurred when social organisations adopt design thinking, while users in the form of interconnecting agencies reduce the gap between designers and communities. The last two articles were developed from papers presented at the 17th International CINet conference organized in Turin in 2016 by Paolo Neirotti and his colleagues. In the first article, F{\´a}bio Gama, Johan Frishammar and Vinit Parida focus on ideation and open innovation in small- and medium-sized enterprises. They investigate the relationship between systematic idea generation and performance and the moderating role of market-based partnerships. Based on a survey among manufacturing SMEs, they conclude that higher levels of performance are reached and that collaboration with customers and suppliers pays off most when idea generation is done in a highly systematic way. The second article, by Anna Holmquist, Mats Magnusson and Mona Livholts, resonates the theme of the CINet conference 'Innovation and Tradition; combining the old and the new'. They explore how tradition is used in craft-based design practices to create new meaning. Applying a narrative 'research through design' approach they uncover important design elements, and tensions between them. Please enjoy this first issue of CIM in 2019 and we wish you creativity and innovation without too much stress in the months to come.}, language = {en} } @misc{HoeferDiLellaDahmanietal.2019, author = {H{\"o}fer, Chris Tina and Di Lella, Santiago and Dahmani, Ismail and Jungnick, Nadine and Bordag, Natalie and Bobone, Sara and Huan, Q. and Keller, S. and Herrmann, A. and Chiantia, Salvatore}, title = {Corrigendum to: Structural determinants of the interaction between influenza A virus matrix protein M1 and lipid membranes (Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes. - 1861, (2019), pg 1123-1134)}, series = {Biochimica et biophysica acta : Biomembranes}, volume = {1861}, journal = {Biochimica et biophysica acta : Biomembranes}, number = {10}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {0005-2736}, doi = {10.1016/j.bbamem.2019.07.002}, pages = {1}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{HugenschmidtGiannopoulosTronicke2019, author = {Hugenschmidt, Johannes and Giannopoulos, Antonios and Tronicke, Jens}, title = {Foreword}, series = {Near surface geophysics}, volume = {17}, journal = {Near surface geophysics}, number = {3}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {1569-4445}, doi = {10.1002/nsg.12050}, pages = {199 -- 200}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{HorreoBreedveldLindtkeetal.2019, author = {Horreo, J. L. and Breedveld, Merel Cathelijne and Lindtke, D. and Heulin, B. and Surget-Groba, Yann and Fitze, Patrick S.}, title = {Correction: Genetic introgression among differentiated clades is lower among clades exhibiting different parity modes. - (Heredity. - 123, (2019) pg 264)}, series = {Heredity}, volume = {123}, journal = {Heredity}, number = {2}, publisher = {Nature Publ. Group}, address = {London}, issn = {0018-067X}, doi = {10.1038/s41437-019-0223-1}, pages = {285 -- 285}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The original version of this Article contained an error in the spelling of the author Y. Surget-Groba, which was incorrectly given as J. Surget-Groba. This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.}, 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} } @misc{Heucher2019, author = {Heucher, Angela}, title = {Reconsidering overlap in global food security governance}, series = {Food security : the science, sociology and economics of food production and access to food}, volume = {11}, journal = {Food security : the science, sociology and economics of food production and access to food}, number = {3}, publisher = {Springer Netherlands}, address = {Dordrecht}, issn = {1876-4517}, doi = {10.1007/s12571-019-00916-z}, pages = {555 -- 558}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{HesseMatthiesSinzigetal.2019, author = {Hesse, Guenter and Matthies, Christoph and Sinzig, Werner and Uflacker, Matthias}, title = {Adding Value by Combining Business and Sensor Data}, series = {Database Systems for Advanced Applications}, volume = {11448}, journal = {Database Systems for Advanced Applications}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Cham}, isbn = {978-3-030-18590-9}, issn = {0302-9743}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-18590-9_80}, pages = {528 -- 532}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Industry 4.0 and the Internet of Things are recent developments that have lead to the creation of new kinds of manufacturing data. Linking this new kind of sensor data to traditional business information is crucial for enterprises to take advantage of the data's full potential. In this paper, we present a demo which allows experiencing this data integration, both vertically between technical and business contexts and horizontally along the value chain. The tool simulates a manufacturing company, continuously producing both business and sensor data, and supports issuing ad-hoc queries that answer specific questions related to the business. In order to adapt to different environments, users can configure sensor characteristics to their needs.}, language = {en} } @misc{HerzogHoenigSchroederPreikschatetal.2019, author = {Herzog, Benedict and H{\"o}nig, Timo and Schr{\"o}der-Preikschat, Wolfgang and Plauth, Max and K{\"o}hler, Sven and Polze, Andreas}, title = {Bridging the Gap}, series = {e-Energy '19: Proceedings of the Tenth ACM International Conference on Future Energy Systems}, journal = {e-Energy '19: Proceedings of the Tenth ACM International Conference on Future Energy Systems}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-6671-7}, doi = {10.1145/3307772.3330176}, pages = {428 -- 430}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The recent restructuring of the electricity grid (i.e., smart grid) introduces a number of challenges for today's large-scale computing systems. To operate reliable and efficient, computing systems must adhere not only to technical limits (i.e., thermal constraints) but they must also reduce operating costs, for example, by increasing their energy efficiency. Efforts to improve the energy efficiency, however, are often hampered by inflexible software components that hardly adapt to underlying hardware characteristics. In this paper, we propose an approach to bridge the gap between inflexible software and heterogeneous hardware architectures. Our proposal introduces adaptive software components that dynamically adapt to heterogeneous processing units (i.e., accelerators) during runtime to improve the energy efficiency of computing systems.}, language = {en} } @misc{HernandezDemirayArnrichetal.2019, author = {Hernandez, Netzahualcoyotl and Demiray, Burcu and Arnrich, Bert and Favela, Jesus}, title = {An Exploratory Study to Detect Temporal Orientation Using Bluetooth's sensor}, series = {PervasiveHealth'19: Proceedings of the 13th EAI International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare}, journal = {PervasiveHealth'19: Proceedings of the 13th EAI International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-6126-2}, issn = {2153-1633}, doi = {10.1145/3329189.3329223}, pages = {292 -- 297}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Mobile sensing technology allows us to investigate human behaviour on a daily basis. In the study, we examined temporal orientation, which refers to the capacity of thinking or talking about personal events in the past and future. We utilise the mksense platform that allows us to use the experience-sampling method. Individual's thoughts and their relationship with smartphone's Bluetooth data is analysed to understand in which contexts people are influenced by social environments, such as the people they spend the most time with. As an exploratory study, we analyse social condition influence through a collection of Bluetooth data and survey information from participant's smartphones. Preliminary results show that people are likely to focus on past events when interacting with close-related people, and focus on future planning when interacting with strangers. Similarly, people experience present temporal orientation when accompanied by known people. We believe that these findings are linked to emotions since, in its most basic state, emotion is a state of physiological arousal combined with an appropriated cognition. In this contribution, we envision a smartphone application for automatically inferring human emotions based on user's temporal orientation by using Bluetooth sensors, we briefly elaborate on the influential factor of temporal orientation episodes and conclude with a discussion and lessons learned.}, language = {en} } @misc{HermanussenSchefflerGrothetal.2019, author = {Hermanussen, Michael and Scheffler, Christiane and Groth, Detlef and Bogin, Barry}, title = {Student work on trends in infant and child growth}, series = {Journal of biological and clinical anthropology : Anthropologischer Anzeiger : Mitteilungsorgan der Gesellschaft f{\"u}r Anthropologie}, volume = {76}, journal = {Journal of biological and clinical anthropology : Anthropologischer Anzeiger : Mitteilungsorgan der Gesellschaft f{\"u}r Anthropologie}, number = {5}, publisher = {Schweizerbart}, address = {Stuttgart}, issn = {0003-5548}, doi = {10.1127/anthranz/2019/1052}, pages = {363 -- 364}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{HermanussenBoginScheffler2019, author = {Hermanussen, Michael and Bogin, Barry and Scheffler, Christiane}, title = {The impact of social identity and social dominance on the regulation of human growth: A viewpoint}, series = {Acta paediatrica : nurturing the child}, volume = {108}, journal = {Acta paediatrica : nurturing the child}, number = {12}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0803-5253}, doi = {10.1111/apa.14970}, pages = {2132 -- 2134}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{HeinickerLikavcanLin2019, author = {Heinicker, Paul and Likavcan, Lukas and Lin, Qiao}, title = {alt'ai: designing machine-to-machine interfaces for automated landscapes}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-4503-6311-2}, doi = {10.1145/3306211.3320146}, pages = {6}, year = {2019}, abstract = {alt'ai is an agent-based simulation inspired by aesthetics, culture and environmental conditions of the Altai mountain region on the borders between Russia, Kazakhstan, China and Mongolia. It is set into a scenario of a remote automated landscape populated by sentient machines, where biological species, machines and environments autonomously interact to produce unforeseeable visual outputs. It poses a question of designing future machine-to-machine authentication protocols that are based on the use of images encoding agent behavior. Also, the simulation provides rich visual perspective on this challenge. The project pleads for a heavily aestheticized approach to design practice and highlights the importance of productively inefficient and information redundant systems.}, language = {en} } @misc{HanvanderDiCiccioLeopoldetal.2019, author = {Han van der, Aa and Di Ciccio, Claudio and Leopold, Henrik and Reijers, Hajo A.}, title = {Extracting Declarative Process Models from Natural Language}, series = {Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAISE 2019)}, volume = {11483}, journal = {Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAISE 2019)}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Cham}, isbn = {978-3-030-21290-2}, issn = {0302-9743}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-21290-2_23}, pages = {365 -- 382}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Process models are an important means to capture information on organizational operations and often represent the starting point for process analysis and improvement. Since the manual elicitation and creation of process models is a time-intensive endeavor, a variety of techniques have been developed that automatically derive process models from textual process descriptions. However, these techniques, so far, only focus on the extraction of traditional, imperative process models. The extraction of declarative process models, which allow to effectively capture complex process behavior in a compact fashion, has not been addressed. In this paper we close this gap by presenting the first automated approach for the extraction of declarative process models from natural language. To achieve this, we developed tailored Natural Language Processing techniques that identify activities and their inter-relations from textual constraint descriptions. A quantitative evaluation shows that our approach is able to generate constraints that closely resemble those established by humans. Therefore, our approach provides automated support for an otherwise tedious and complex manual endeavor.}, language = {en} } @misc{HalfpapSchlosser2019, author = {Halfpap, Stefan and Schlosser, Rainer}, title = {Workload-Driven Fragment Allocation for Partially Replicated Databases Using Linear Programming}, series = {2019 IEEE 35th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE)}, journal = {2019 IEEE 35th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-7474-1}, issn = {1084-4627}, doi = {10.1109/ICDE.2019.00188}, pages = {1746 -- 1749}, year = {2019}, abstract = {In replication schemes, replica nodes can process read-only queries on snapshots of the master node without violating transactional consistency. By analyzing the workload, we can identify query access patterns and replicate data depending to its access frequency. In this paper, we define a linear programming (LP) model to calculate the set of partial replicas with the lowest overall memory capacity while evenly balancing the query load. Furthermore, we propose a scalable decomposition heuristic to calculate solutions for larger problem sizes. While guaranteeing the same performance as state-of-the-art heuristics, our decomposition approach calculates allocations with up to 23\% lower memory footprint for the TPC-H benchmark.}, language = {en} } @misc{HalfpapSchlosser2019, author = {Halfpap, Stefan and Schlosser, Rainer}, title = {A Comparison of Allocation Algorithms for Partially Replicated Databases}, series = {2019 IEEE 35th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE)}, journal = {2019 IEEE 35th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE)}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-5386-7474-1}, issn = {1084-4627}, doi = {10.1109/ICDE.2019.00226}, pages = {2008 -- 2011}, year = {2019}, abstract = {Increasing demand for analytical processing capabilities can be managed by replication approaches. However, to evenly balance the replicas' workload shares while at the same time minimizing the data replication factor is a highly challenging allocation problem. As optimal solutions are only applicable for small problem instances, effective heuristics are indispensable. In this paper, we test and compare state-of-the-art allocation algorithms for partial replication. By visualizing and exploring their (heuristic) solutions for different benchmark workloads, we are able to derive structural insights and to detect an algorithm's strengths as well as its potential for improvement. Further, our application enables end-to-end evaluations of different allocations to verify their theoretical performance.}, language = {en} } @misc{HaagHoeppner2019, author = {Haag, Johannes and Hoeppner, Till}, title = {Errata zu: Denken und Welt - Wege kritischer Metaphysik. dzph. Band 67, 2019, Heft 1, S. 76-97}, series = {Deutsche Zeitschrift f{\"u}r Philosophie : Zweimonatsschrift der internationalen philosophischen Forschung}, volume = {67}, journal = {Deutsche Zeitschrift f{\"u}r Philosophie : Zweimonatsschrift der internationalen philosophischen Forschung}, number = {2}, publisher = {De Gruyter}, address = {Berlin}, issn = {0012-1045}, doi = {10.1515/dzph-2019-0888}, pages = {326 -- 327}, year = {2019}, abstract = {We begin by considering two common ways of conceiving critical metaphysics. According to the first (and polemical) conception, critical metaphysics analyzes nothing more than the form of thought and thereby misses the proper point of metaphysics, namely to investigate the form of reality. According to the second (and affirmative) conception, critical metaphysics starts from the supposed insight that the form of reality can't be other than the form of thought and is thus not required to analyze anything but that form. We argue that the first conception is too weak while the second is too strong. Then we sketch an alternative conception of critical metaphysics, a conception we find expressed both in Kant's B-Deduction and in the way Barry Stroud has recently investigated the possibility of metaphysics. According to such a conception, a properly critical metaphysics needs to proceed in two steps: first, it needs to analyze the most general and necessary form of any thought that is about an objective reality at all; second, it needs to investigate how that form of thought relates to the reality it purports to represent. But unlike Kant, Stroud remains sceptical regarding the possibility of a satisfying transition from thought to reality in metaphysics. We argue that this dissatisfaction can be traced back to a notion of objectivity and reality in terms of complete mind-independence. Then we sketch an alternative notion of objectivity and reality in terms of distinctness from subjects and acts of thinking, and argue that it is that notion that allows Kant, with his Transcendental Idealism, to make the transition required for any satisfying metaphysics, namely that from the form of thought to reality.}, language = {de} } @misc{GudipudiRybskiLuedekeetal.2019, author = {Gudipudi, Venkata Ramana and Rybski, Diego and L{\"u}deke, Matthias K. B. and Kropp, J{\"u}rgen}, title = {Urban emission scaling - Research insights and a way forward}, series = {Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science}, volume = {46}, journal = {Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science}, number = {9}, publisher = {Sage Publ.}, address = {London}, issn = {2399-8083}, doi = {10.1177/2399808319825867}, pages = {1678 -- 1683}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{GroteWagemann2019, author = {Grote, J{\"u}rgen R. and Wagemann, Claudius}, title = {Preface}, series = {Social Movements and Organized Labour. Passions and Interests}, journal = {Social Movements and Organized Labour. Passions and Interests}, publisher = {Routledge}, address = {Abingdon}, isbn = {978-1-315-60955-3}, pages = {X -- XII}, year = {2019}, language = {en} } @misc{Goychuk2019, author = {Goychuk, Igor}, title = {Comment on "Anomalous Escape Governed by Thermal 1/f Noise" Reply (R. K. Singh)}, series = {Physical review letters}, volume = {123}, journal = {Physical review letters}, number = {23}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, address = {College Park}, issn = {0031-9007}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.123.238902}, pages = {1}, year = {2019}, 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} }