TY - GEN A1 - Hullebus, Marc Antony A1 - Tobin, Stephen J. A1 - Gafos, Adamantios I. T1 - Speaker-specific structure in German voiceless stop voice onset times T2 - 19th Annual confernce of the international speech communication association (INTERSPEECH 2018), VOLS 1-6: speech research for emerging markets in multilingual societies N2 - Voice onset time (VOT), a primary cue for voicing in many languages including English and German, is known to vary greatly between speakers, but also displays robust within-speaker consistencies, at least in English. The current analysis extends these findings to German. VOT measures were investigated from voiceless alveolar and velar stops in CV syllables cued by a visual prompt in a cue-distractor task. Comparably to English, a considerable portion of German VOT variability can be attributed to the syllable’s vowel length and the stop’s place of articulation. Individual differences in VOT still remain irrespective of speech rate. However, significant correlations across places of articulation and between speaker-specific mean VOTs and standard deviations indicate that talkers employ a relatively unified VOT profile across places of articulation. This could allow listeners to more efficiently adapt to speaker-specific realisations. KW - speech production KW - speech variability KW - voice onset time Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5108-7221-9 U6 - https://doi.org/10.21437/Interspeech.2018-2288 SN - 2308-457X SP - 1403 EP - 1407 PB - ISCA-International Speech Communication Association CY - Baixas ER - TY - GEN A1 - Sukmana, Muhammad Ihsan Haikal A1 - Torkura, Kennedy A. A1 - Cheng, Feng A1 - Meinel, Christoph A1 - Graupner, Hendrik T1 - Unified logging system for monitoring multiple cloud storage providers in cloud storage broker T2 - 32ND International Conference on Information Networking (ICOIN) N2 - With the increasing demand for personal and enterprise data storage service, Cloud Storage Broker (CSB) provides cloud storage service using multiple Cloud Service Providers (CSPs) with guaranteed Quality of Service (QoS), such as data availability and security. However monitoring cloud storage usage in multiple CSPs has become a challenge for CSB due to lack of standardized logging format for cloud services that causes each CSP to implement its own format. In this paper we propose a unified logging system that can be used by CSB to monitor cloud storage usage across multiple CSPs. We gather cloud storage log files from three different CSPs and normalise these into our proposed log format that can be used for further analysis process. We show that our work enables a coherent view suitable for data navigation, monitoring, and analytics. KW - Unified logging system KW - Cloud Service Provider KW - cloud monitoring KW - data integration KW - security analytics Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-2290-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/ICOIN.2018.8343081 SP - 44 EP - 49 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Torkura, Kennedy A. A1 - Sukmana, Muhammad Ihsan Haikal A1 - Strauss, Tim A1 - Graupner, Hendrik A1 - Cheng, Feng A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - CSBAuditor BT - proactive security risk analysis for cloud storage broker systems T2 - 17th International Symposium on Network Computing and Applications (NCA) N2 - Cloud Storage Brokers (CSB) provide seamless and concurrent access to multiple Cloud Storage Services (CSS) while abstracting cloud complexities from end-users. However, this multi-cloud strategy faces several security challenges including enlarged attack surfaces, malicious insider threats, security complexities due to integration of disparate components and API interoperability issues. Novel security approaches are imperative to tackle these security issues. Therefore, this paper proposes CSBAuditor, a novel cloud security system that continuously audits CSB resources, to detect malicious activities and unauthorized changes e.g. bucket policy misconfigurations, and remediates these anomalies. The cloud state is maintained via a continuous snapshotting mechanism thereby ensuring fault tolerance. We adopt the principles of chaos engineering by integrating Broker Monkey, a component that continuously injects failure into our reference CSB system, Cloud RAID. Hence, CSBAuditor is continuously tested for efficiency i.e. its ability to detect the changes injected by Broker Monkey. CSBAuditor employs security metrics for risk analysis by computing severity scores for detected vulnerabilities using the Common Configuration Scoring System, thereby overcoming the limitation of insufficient security metrics in existing cloud auditing schemes. CSBAuditor has been tested using various strategies including chaos engineering failure injection strategies. Our experimental evaluation validates the efficiency of our approach against the aforementioned security issues with a detection and recovery rate of over 96 %. KW - Cloud-Security KW - Cloud Audit KW - Security Metrics KW - Security Risk Assessment KW - Secure Configuration Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-7659-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/NCA.2018.8548329 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bin Tareaf, Raad A1 - Berger, Philipp A1 - Hennig, Patrick A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - ASEDS BT - Towards automatic social emotion detection system using facebook reactions T2 - IEEE 20th International Conference on High Performance Computing and Communications; IEEE 16th International Conference on Smart City; IEEE 4th International Conference on Data Science and Systems (HPCC/SmartCity/DSS)) N2 - The Massive adoption of social media has provided new ways for individuals to express their opinion and emotion online. In 2016, Facebook introduced a new reactions feature that allows users to express their psychological emotions regarding published contents using so-called Facebook reactions. In this paper, a framework for predicting the distribution of Facebook post reactions is presented. For this purpose, we collected an enormous amount of Facebook posts associated with their reactions labels using the proposed scalable Facebook crawler. The training process utilizes 3 million labeled posts for more than 64,000 unique Facebook pages from diverse categories. The evaluation on standard benchmarks using the proposed features shows promising results compared to previous research. The final model is able to predict the reaction distribution on Facebook posts with a recall score of 0.90 for "Joy" emotion. KW - Emotion Mining KW - Psychological Emotions KW - Machine Learning KW - Social Media Analysis KW - Natural Language Processing Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-6614-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/HPCC/SmartCity/DSS.2018.00143 SP - 860 EP - 866 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Lehmann, Frederike A1 - Binet, Silvia A1 - Franz, Alexandra A1 - Taubert, Andreas A1 - Schorr, Susan T1 - Cation and anion substitutions in hybrid perovskites BT - solubility limits and phase stabilizing effects T2 - 7th World Conference on Photovoltaic Energy Conversion (WCPEC) (A Joint Conference of 45th IEEE PVSC, 28th PVSEC & 34th EU PVSEC) N2 - Organic or inorganic (A) metal (M) halide (X) perovskites (AMX(3)) are semiconductor materials setting the basis for the development of highly efficient, low-cost and multijunction solar energy conversion devices. The best efficiencies nowadays are obtained with mixed compositions containing methylammonium, formamidinium, Cs and Rb as well as iodine, bromine and chlorine as anions. The understanding of fundamental properties such as crystal structure and its effect on the band gap, as well as their phase stability is essential. In this systematic study X-ray diffraction and photoluminescense spectroscopy were applied to evaluate structural and optoelectronic properties of hybrid perovskites with mixed compositions. Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-8529-7 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/PVSC.2018.8547645 SN - 2159-2330 SN - 2159-2349 SP - 1555 EP - 1558 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Teusner, Ralf A1 - Matthies, Christoph A1 - Staubitz, Thomas T1 - What Stays in Mind? BT - Retention Rates in Programming MOOCs T2 - IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE) Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-1174-6 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/FIE.2018.8658890 SN - 0190-5848 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Staubitz, Thomas A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - Collaborative Learning in MOOCs - Approaches and Experiments T2 - 2018 IEEE Frontiers in Education (FIE) Conference N2 - This Research-to-Practice paper examines the practical application of various forms of collaborative learning in MOOCs. Since 2012, about 60 MOOCs in the wider context of Information Technology and Computer Science have been conducted on our self-developed MOOC platform. The platform is also used by several customers, who either run their own platform instances or use our white label platform. We, as well as some of our partners, have experimented with different approaches in collaborative learning in these courses. Based on the results of early experiments, surveys amongst our participants, and requests by our business partners we have integrated several options to offer forms of collaborative learning to the system. The results of our experiments are directly fed back to the platform development, allowing to fine tune existing and to add new tools where necessary. In the paper at hand, we discuss the benefits and disadvantages of decisions in the design of a MOOC with regard to the various forms of collaborative learning. While the focus of the paper at hand is on forms of large group collaboration, two types of small group collaboration on our platforms are briefly introduced. KW - MOOC KW - Collaborative learning KW - Peer assessment KW - Team based assignment KW - Teamwork Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-1174-6 SN - 0190-5848 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Matthies, Christoph A1 - Teusner, Ralf A1 - Hesse, Günter T1 - Beyond Surveys BT - Analyzing software development artifacts to assess teaching efforts T2 - 2018 IEEE Frontiers in Education (FIE) Conference KW - software engineering KW - capstone course KW - development artifacts KW - Kanban KW - Scrum KW - Educational Data Mining Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-1174-6 SN - 978-1-5386-1175-3 SN - 0190-5848 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Plauth, Max A1 - Polze, Andreas T1 - Towards improving data transfer efficiency for accelerators using hardware compression T2 - Sixth International Symposium on Computing and Networking Workshops (CANDARW) N2 - The overhead of moving data is the major limiting factor in todays hardware, especially in heterogeneous systems where data needs to be transferred frequently between host and accelerator memory. With the increasing availability of hardware-based compression facilities in modern computer architectures, this paper investigates the potential of hardware-accelerated I/O Link Compression as a promising approach to reduce data volumes and transfer time, thus improving the overall efficiency of accelerators in heterogeneous systems. Our considerations are focused on On-the-Fly compression in both Single-Node and Scale-Out deployments. Based on a theoretical analysis, this paper demonstrates the feasibility of hardware-accelerated On-the-Fly I/O Link Compression for many workloads in a Scale-Out scenario, and for some even in a Single-Node scenario. These findings are confirmed in a preliminary evaluation using software-and hardware-based implementations of the 842 compression algorithm. KW - Data compression KW - hardware KW - data transfer KW - accelerator architectures Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-9184-7 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/CANDARW.2018.00031 SP - 125 EP - 131 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Sprinz, Detlef F. ED - Luterbacher, Urs ED - Sprinz, Detlef F. T1 - Our Conclusions T2 - Global Climate Policy: Actors, Concepts, and Enduring Challenges Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-0-262-53534-2 SN - 978-0-262-03792-1 SP - 323 EP - 335 PB - MIT Press CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Luterbacher, Urs A1 - Sprinz, Detlef F. ED - Luterbacher, Urs ED - Sprinz, Detlef F. T1 - Foreword T2 - Global climate policy: actors, concepts, and enduring challenges Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-0-262-53534-2 SN - 978-0-262-03792-1 SP - IX EP - XI PB - MIT Press CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Stojanovic, Vladeta A1 - Trapp, Matthias A1 - Richter, Rico A1 - Döllner, Jürgen Roland Friedrich T1 - A service-oriented approach for classifying 3D points clouds by example of office furniture classification T2 - Web3D 2018: Proceedings of the 23rd International ACM Conference on 3D Web Technology N2 - The rapid digitalization of the Facility Management (FM) sector has increased the demand for mobile, interactive analytics approaches concerning the operational state of a building. These approaches provide the key to increasing stakeholder engagement associated with Operation and Maintenance (O&M) procedures of living and working areas, buildings, and other built environment spaces. We present a generic and fast approach to process and analyze given 3D point clouds of typical indoor office spaces to create corresponding up-to-date approximations of classified segments and object-based 3D models that can be used to analyze, record and highlight changes of spatial configurations. The approach is based on machine-learning methods used to classify the scanned 3D point cloud data using 2D images. This approach can be used to primarily track changes of objects over time for comparison, allowing for routine classification, and presentation of results used for decision making. We specifically focus on classification, segmentation, and reconstruction of multiple different object types in a 3D point-cloud scene. We present our current research and describe the implementation of these technologies as a web-based application using a services-oriented methodology. KW - Indoor Models KW - 3D Point Clouds KW - Machine KW - Learning KW - BIM KW - Service-Oriented Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-4503-5800-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3208806.3208810 SP - 1 EP - 9 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Müller, Gesine A1 - Locane, Jorge Joaquin A1 - Loy, Benjamin T1 - Introduction T2 - Re-mapping World Literature: Writing, Book Markets and Epistemologies between Latin America and the Global South / Escrituras, mercados y epistemologías entre América Latina y el Sur Global Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-3-11-054957-7 SN - 978-3-11-054952-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110549577-001 SN - 2513-0757 SP - 1 EP - 12 PB - De Gruyter CY - Berlin ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bartz, Christian A1 - Yang, Haojin A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - SEE: Towards semi-supervised end-to-end scene text recognition T2 - Proceedings of the Thirty-Second AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Thirtieth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, Eight Symposium on Educational Advances in Artificial Intelligence N2 - Detecting and recognizing text in natural scene images is a challenging, yet not completely solved task. In recent years several new systems that try to solve at least one of the two sub-tasks (text detection and text recognition) have been proposed. In this paper we present SEE, a step towards semi-supervised neural networks for scene text detection and recognition, that can be optimized end-to-end. Most existing works consist of multiple deep neural networks and several pre-processing steps. In contrast to this, we propose to use a single deep neural network, that learns to detect and recognize text from natural images, in a semi-supervised way. SEE is a network that integrates and jointly learns a spatial transformer network, which can learn to detect text regions in an image, and a text recognition network that takes the identified text regions and recognizes their textual content. We introduce the idea behind our novel approach and show its feasibility, by performing a range of experiments on standard benchmark datasets, where we achieve competitive results. Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-57735-800-8 VL - 10 SP - 6674 EP - 6681 PB - ASSOC Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence CY - Palo Alto ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bosser, Anne-Gwenn A1 - Cabalar, Pedro A1 - Dieguez, Martin A1 - Schaub, Torsten T1 - Introducing temporal stable models for linear dynamic logic T2 - 16th International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning N2 - We propose a new temporal extension of the logic of Here-and-There (HT) and its equilibria obtained by combining it with dynamic logic over (linear) traces. Unlike previous temporal extensions of HT based on linear temporal logic, the dynamic logic features allow us to reason about the composition of actions. For instance, this can be used to exercise fine grained control when planning in robotics, as exemplified by GOLOG. In this paper, we lay the foundations of our approach, and refer to it as Linear Dynamic Equilibrium Logic, or simply DEL. We start by developing the formal framework of DEL and provide relevant characteristic results. Among them, we elaborate upon the relationships to traditional linear dynamic logic and previous temporal extensions of HT. Y1 - 2018 UR - https://www.dc.fi.udc.es/~cabalar/del.pdf SP - 12 EP - 21 PB - ASSOC Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence CY - Palo Alto ER - TY - GEN A1 - Discher, Sören A1 - Richter, Rico A1 - Döllner, Jürgen Roland Friedrich ED - Spencer, SN T1 - A scalable webGL-based approach for visualizing massive 3D point clouds using semantics-dependent rendering techniques T2 - Web3D 2018: The 23rd International ACM Conference on 3D Web Technology N2 - 3D point cloud technology facilitates the automated and highly detailed digital acquisition of real-world environments such as assets, sites, cities, and countries; the acquired 3D point clouds represent an essential category of geodata used in a variety of geoinformation applications and systems. In this paper, we present a web-based system for the interactive and collaborative exploration and inspection of arbitrary large 3D point clouds. Our approach is based on standard WebGL on the client side and is able to render 3D point clouds with billions of points. It uses spatial data structures and level-of-detail representations to manage the 3D point cloud data and to deploy out-of-core and web-based rendering concepts. By providing functionality for both, thin-client and thick-client applications, the system scales for client devices that are vastly different in computing capabilities. Different 3D point-based rendering techniques and post-processing effects are provided to enable task-specific and data-specific filtering and highlighting, e.g., based on per-point surface categories or temporal information. A set of interaction techniques allows users to collaboratively work with the data, e.g., by measuring distances and areas, by annotating, or by selecting and extracting data subsets. Additional value is provided by the system's ability to display additional, context-providing geodata alongside 3D point clouds and to integrate task-specific processing and analysis operations. We have evaluated the presented techniques and the prototype system with different data sets from aerial, mobile, and terrestrial acquisition campaigns with up to 120 billion points to show their practicality and feasibility. KW - 3D Point Clouds KW - web-based rendering KW - point-based rendering Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-4503-5800-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3208806.3208816 SP - 1 EP - 9 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Combi, Carlo A1 - Oliboni, Barbara A1 - Weske, Mathias A1 - Zerbato, Francesca ED - Trujillo, JC Davis T1 - Conceptual modeling of processes and data BT - Connecting different perspectives T2 - Conceptual Modeling, ER 2018 N2 - Business processes constantly generate, manipulate, and consume data that are managed by organizational databases. Despite being central to process modeling and execution, the link between processes and data is often handled by developers when the process is implemented, thus leaving the connection unexplored during the conceptual design. In this paper, we introduce, formalize, and evaluate a novel conceptual view that bridges the gap between process and data models, and show some kinds of interesting insights that can be derived from this novel proposal. Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-3-030-00847-5 SN - 978-3-030-00846-8 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-00847-5_18 SN - 0302-9743 SN - 1611-3349 VL - 11157 SP - 236 EP - 250 PB - Springer CY - Cham ER - TY - GEN A1 - Frank, Mario A1 - Kreitz, Christoph T1 - A theorem prover for scientific and educational purposes T2 - Electronic proceedings in theoretical computer science N2 - We present a prototype of an integrated reasoning environment for educational purposes. The presented tool is a fragment of a proof assistant and automated theorem prover. We describe the existing and planned functionality of the theorem prover and especially the functionality of the educational fragment. This currently supports working with terms of the untyped lambda calculus and addresses both undergraduate students and researchers. We show how the tool can be used to support the students' understanding of functional programming and discuss general problems related to the process of building theorem proving software that aims at supporting both research and education. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.267.4 SN - 2075-2180 IS - 267 SP - 59 EP - 69 PB - Open Publishing Association CY - Sydney ER - TY - GEN A1 - Alviano, Mario A1 - Romero Davila, Javier A1 - Schaub, Torsten T1 - Preference Relations by Approximation T2 - Sixteenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning N2 - Declarative languages for knowledge representation and reasoning provide constructs to define preference relations over the set of possible interpretations, so that preferred models represent optimal solutions of the encoded problem. We introduce the notion of approximation for replacing preference relations with stronger preference relations, that is, relations comparing more pairs of interpretations. Our aim is to accelerate the computation of a non-empty subset of the optimal solutions by means of highly specialized algorithms. We implement our approach in Answer Set Programming (ASP), where problems involving quantitative and qualitative preference relations can be addressed by ASPRIN, implementing a generic optimization algorithm. Unlike this, chains of approximations allow us to reduce several preference relations to the preference relations associated with ASP’s native weak constraints and heuristic directives. In this way, ASPRIN can now take advantage of several highly optimized algorithms implemented by ASP solvers for computing optimal solutions Y1 - 2018 SP - 2 EP - 11 PB - AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence CY - Palo Alto ER - TY - GEN A1 - Schäpers, Björn A1 - Niemueller, Tim A1 - Lakemeyer, Gerhard A1 - Gebser, Martin A1 - Schaub, Torsten T1 - ASP-Based Time-Bounded Planning for Logistics Robots T2 - Twenty-Eighth International Conference on Automated Planning and Scheduling (ICAPS 2018) N2 - Manufacturing industries are undergoing a major paradigm shift towards more autonomy. Automated planning and scheduling then becomes a necessity. The Planning and Execution Competition for Logistics Robots in Simulation held at ICAPS is based on this scenario and provides an interesting testbed. However, the posed problem is challenging as also demonstrated by the somewhat weak results in 2017. The domain requires temporal reasoning and dealing with uncertainty. We propose a novel planning system based on Answer Set Programming and the Clingo solver to tackle these problems and incentivize robot cooperation. Our results show a significant performance improvement, both, in terms of lowering computational requirements and better game metrics. Y1 - 2018 SN - 2334-0835 SN - 2334-0843 SP - 509 EP - 517 PB - ASSOC Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence CY - Palo Alto ER - TY - GEN A1 - Schneider, Oliver A1 - Shigeyama, Jotaro A1 - Kovacs, Robert A1 - Roumen, Thijs Jan A1 - Marwecki, Sebastian A1 - Böckhoff, Nico A1 - Glöckner, Daniel Amadeus Johannes A1 - Bounama, Jonas A1 - Baudisch, Patrick T1 - DualPanto BT - a haptic device that enables blind users to continuously interact with virtual worlds T2 - UIST '18: Proceedings of the 31st Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology N2 - We present a new haptic device that enables blind users to continuously track the absolute position of moving objects in spatial virtual environments, as is the case in sports or shooter games. Users interact with DualPanto by operating the me handle with one hand and by holding on to the it handle with the other hand. Each handle is connected to a pantograph haptic input/output device. The key feature is that the two handles are spatially registered with respect to each other. When guiding their avatar through a virtual world using the me handle, spatial registration enables users to track moving objects by having the device guide the output hand. This allows blind players of a 1-on-1 soccer game to race for the ball or evade an opponent; it allows blind players of a shooter game to aim at an opponent and dodge shots. In our user study, blind participants reported very high enjoyment when using the device to play (6.5/7). KW - Haptics KW - force-feedback KW - accessibility KW - blind KW - visually impaired KW - gaming Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-4503-5948-1 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3242587.3242604 SP - 877 EP - 887 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Marwecki, Sebastian A1 - Baudisch, Patrick T1 - Scenograph BT - Fitting Real-Walking VR Experiences into Various Tracking Volumes T2 - UIST '18: Proceedings of the 31st Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology N2 - When developing a real-walking virtual reality experience, designers generally create virtual locations to fit a specific tracking volume. Unfortunately, this prevents the resulting experience from running on a smaller or differently shaped tracking volume. To address this, we present a software system called Scenograph. The core of Scenograph is a tracking volume-independent representation of real-walking experiences. Scenograph instantiates the experience to a tracking volume of given size and shape by splitting the locations into smaller ones while maintaining narrative structure. In our user study, participants' ratings of realism decreased significantly when existing techniques were used to map a 25m2 experience to 9m2 and an L-shaped 8m2 tracking volume. In contrast, ratings did not differ when Scenograph was used to instantiate the experience. KW - Virtual reality KW - real-walking KW - locomotion Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-4503-5948-1 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3242587.3242648 SP - 511 EP - 520 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kovacs, Robert A1 - Ion, Alexandra A1 - Lopes, Pedro A1 - Oesterreich, Tim A1 - Filter, Johannes A1 - Otto, Philip A1 - Arndt, Tobias A1 - Ring, Nico A1 - Witte, Melvin A1 - Synytsia, Anton A1 - Baudisch, Patrick T1 - TrussFormer BT - 3D Printing Large Kinetic Structures T2 - UIST '18: Proceedings of the 31st Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology N2 - 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. KW - Fabrication KW - 3D printing KW - variable geometry truss KW - large scale mechanism Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-4503-5948-1 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3242587.3242607 SP - 113 EP - 125 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Molnar, Marco A1 - Kok, Manor A1 - Engel, Tilman A1 - Kaplic, Hannes A1 - Mayer, Frank A1 - Seel, Thomas T1 - A method for lower back motion assessment using wearable 6D inertial sensors T2 - 21st International Conference on Information Fusion (FUSION) N2 - Low back pain (LBP) is a leading cause of activity limitation. Objective assessment of the spinal motion plays a key role in diagnosis and treatment of LBP. We propose a method that facilitates clinical assessment of lower back motions by means of a wireless inertial sensor network. The sensor units are attached to the right and left side of the lumbar region, the pelvis and the thighs, respectively. Since magnetometers are known to be unreliable in indoor environments, we use only 3D accelerometer and 3D gyroscope readings. Compensation of integration drift in the horizontal plane is achieved by estimating the gyroscope biases from automatically detected initial rest phases. For the estimation of sensor orientations, both a smoothing algorithm and a filtering algorithm are presented. From these orientations, we determine three-dimensional joint angles between the thighs and the pelvis and between the pelvis and the lumbar region. We compare the orientations and joint angles to measurements of an optical motion tracking system that tracks each skin-mounted sensor by means of reflective markers. Eight subjects perform a neutral initial pose, then flexion/extension, lateral flexion, and rotation of the trunk. The root mean square deviation between inertial and optical angles is about one degree for angles in the frontal and sagittal plane and about two degrees for angles in the transverse plane (both values averaged over all trials). We choose five features that characterize the initial pose and the three motions. Interindividual differences of all features are found to be clearly larger than the observed measurement deviations. These results indicate that the proposed inertial sensor-based method is a promising tool for lower back motion assessment. KW - Inertial measurement units KW - joint angle estimation KW - human motion analysis KW - low back pain KW - back motion assessment KW - avoid magnetometers KW - validation against optical motion capture KW - drift correction Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-0-9964-5276-2 SP - 799 EP - 806 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Klieme, Eric A1 - Tietz, Christian A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - Beware of SMOMBIES BT - Verification of Users based on Activities while Walking T2 - The 17th IEEE International Conference on Trust, Security and Privacy in Computing and Communications (IEEE TrustCom 2018)/the 12th IEEE International Conference on Big Data Science and Engineering (IEEE BigDataSE 2018) N2 - Several research evaluated the user's style of walking for the verification of a claimed identity and showed high authentication accuracies in many settings. In this paper we present a system that successfully verifies a user's identity based on many real world smartphone placements and yet not regarded interactions while walking. Our contribution is the distinction of all considered activities into three distinct subsets and a specific one-class Support Vector Machine per subset. Using sensor data of 30 participants collected in a semi-supervised study approach, we prove that unsupervised verification is possible with very low false-acceptance and false-rejection rates. We furthermore show that these subsets can be distinguished with a high accuracy and demonstrate that this system can be deployed on off-the-shelf smartphones. KW - gait KW - authentication KW - smartphone KW - activities KW - verification KW - behavioral KW - continuous Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-4387-7 SN - 978-1-5386-4389-1 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/TrustCom/BigDataSE.2018.00096 SN - 2324-9013 SP - 651 EP - 660 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hocher, Berthold A1 - Zeng, Shufei T1 - Need for better PTH assays for clinical research and patient treatment T2 - Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine : journal of the Forum of the European Societies of Clinical Chemistry - the European Branch of the International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1515/cclm-2017-0617 SN - 1434-6621 SN - 1437-4331 VL - 56 IS - 2 SP - 183 EP - 185 PB - De Gruyter CY - Berlin ER - TY - GEN A1 - Brune, Sascha T1 - Forces within continental and oceanic rifts BT - numerical modeling elucidates the impact of asthenospheric flow on surface stress T2 - Geology Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1130/focus022018.1 SN - 0091-7613 SN - 1943-2682 VL - 46 IS - 2 SP - 191 EP - 192 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Boulder ER - TY - GEN A1 - Shprits, Yuri A1 - Horne, Richard B. A1 - Kellerman, Adam C. A1 - Drozdov, Alexander T1 - The dynamics of Van Allen belts revisited T2 - Nature physics N2 - In an effort to explain the formation of a narrow third radiation belt at ultra-relativistic energies detected during a solar storm in September 20121, Mann et al.2 present simulations from which they conclude it arises from a process of outward radial diffusion alone, without the need for additional loss processes from higher frequency waves. The comparison of observations with the model in Figs 2 and 3 of their Article clearly shows that even with strong radial diffusion rates, the model predicts a third belt near L* = 3 that is twice as wide as observed and approximately an order of magnitude more intense. We therefore disagree with their interpretation that “the agreement between the absolute fluxes from the model and those observed by REPT [the Relativistic Electron Proton Telescope] shown on Figs 2 and 3 is excellent.” Previous studies3 have shown that outward radial diffusion plays a very important role in the dynamics of the outer belt and is capable of explaining rapid reductions in the electron flux. It has also been shown that it can produce remnant belts (Fig. 2 of a long-term simulation study4). However, radial diffusion alone cannot explain the formation of the narrow third belt at multi-MeV during September 2012. An additional loss mechanism is required. Higher radial diffusion rates cannot improve the comparison of model presented by Mann et al. with observations. A further increase in the radial diffusion rates (reported in Fig. 4 of the Supplementary Information of ref. 2) results in the overestimation of the outer belt fluxes by up to three orders of magnitude at energy of 3.4 MeV. Observations at 2 MeV, where belts show only a two-zone structure, were not presented by Mann et al. Moreover, simulations of electrons with energies below 2 MeV with the same diffusion rates and boundary conditions used by the authors would probably produce very strong depletions down to L = 3–3.5, where L is radial distance from the centre of the Earth to the given field line in the equatorial plane. Observations do not show a non-adiabatic loss below L ∼ 4.5 for 2 MeV. Such different dynamics between 2 MeV and above 4 MeV at around L = 3.5 are another indication that particles are scattered by electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) waves that affect only energies above a certain threshold. Observations of the phase space density (PSD) provide additional evidence for the local loss of electrons. Around L* = 3.5–4 PSD shows significant decrease by an order of magnitude starting in the afternoon of 3 September (Fig. 1a), while PSD above L* = 4 is increasing. The minimum in PSD between L* = 3.5–4 continues to decrease until 4 September. This evolution demonstrates that the loss is not produced by outward diffusion. Radial diffusion cannot produce deepening minima, as it works to smooth gradients. Just as growing peaks in PSD show the presence of localized acceleration5, deepening minima show the presence of localized loss. Figure 1: Time evolution of radiation profiles in electron PSD at relativistic and ultra-relativistic energies. figure 1 a, Similar to Supplementary Fig. 3 of ref. 2, but using TS07D model10 and for μ = 2,500 MeV G−1, K = 0.05 RE G0.5 (where RE is the radius of the Earth). b, Similar to Supplementary Fig. 3 of ref. 2, but using TS07D model and for μ = 700 MeV G−1, corresponding to MeV energies in the heart of the belt. Minimum in PSD in the heart of the multi-MeV electron radiation belt between 3.5 and 4 RE deepening between the afternoon of 3 September and 5 September clearly show that the narrow remnant belt at multi-MeV below 3.5 RE is produced by the local loss. Full size image The minimum in the outer boundary is reached on the evening of 2 September. After that, the outer boundary moves up, while the minimum decreases by approximately an order of magnitude, clearly showing that this main decrease cannot be explained by outward diffusion, and requires additional loss processes. The analysis of profiles of PSD is a standard tool used, for example, in the study about electron acceleration5 and routinely used by the entire Van Allen Probes team. In the Supplementary Information, we show that this analysis is validated by using different magnetic field models. The Supplementary Information also shows that measurements are above background noise. Deepening minima at multi-MeV during the times when the boundary flux increases are clearly seen in Fig. 1a. They show that there must be localized loss, as radial diffusion cannot produce a minimum that becomes lower with time. At lower energies of 1–2 MeV, which corresponds to lower values of the first adiabatic invariant μ (Fig. 1b), the profiles are monotonic between L* = 3–3.5, consistent with the absence of scattering by EMIC waves that affect only electrons above a certain energy threshold6,7,8,9. In summary, the results of the modelling and observations presented by Mann et al. do not lend support to the claim of explaining the dynamics of the ultra-relativistic third Van Allen radiation belt in terms of an outward radial diffusion process alone. While the outward radial diffusion driven by the loss to the magnetopause2 is certainly operating during this storm, there is compelling observational and modelling2,6 evidence that shows that very efficient localized electron loss operates during this storm at multi-MeV energies, consistent with localized loss produced by EMIC waves. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys4350 SN - 1745-2473 SN - 1745-2481 VL - 14 IS - 2 SP - 102 EP - 103 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Honnen, S. A1 - Wellenberg, Anna A1 - Weides, L. A1 - Bornhorst, Julia A1 - Crone, B. A1 - Karst, U. A1 - Fritz, G. T1 - Identification of potent drug candidates for the prevention of cisplatin-induced neurotoxicity in the model organism C. elegans T2 - Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology Y1 - 2018 UR - https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s00210-018-1477-5.pdf U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00210-018-1477-5 SN - 0028-1298 SN - 1432-1912 VL - 391 SP - S4 EP - S4 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Dunsing, Valentin A1 - Magnus, Mayer A1 - Liebsch, Filip A1 - Multhaup, Gerhard A1 - Chiantia, Salvatore T1 - Direct Evidence of APLP1 Trans Interactions in Cell-Cell Adhesion Platforms Investigated via Fluorescence Fluctuation Spectroscopy T2 - Biophysical journal N2 - The Amyloid-precursor-like protein 1 (APLP1) is a neuronal type I transmembrane protein which plays a role in synaptic adhesion and synaptogenesis. Past investigations indicated that APLP1 is involved in the formation of protein-protein complexes that bridge the junctions between neighboring cells. Nevertheless, APLP1-APLP1 trans interactions have never been directly observed in higher eukaryotic cells. Here, we investigate APLP1 interactions and dynamics directly in living human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells, using fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy techniques, namely cross-correlation scanning fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (sFCS) and Number&Brightness (N&B). Our results show that APLP1 forms homotypic trans complexes at cell-cell contacts. In the presence of zinc ions, the protein forms macroscopic clusters, exhibiting an even higher degree of trans binding and strongly reduced dynamics. Further evidence from Giant Plasma Membrane Vesicles and live cell actin staining suggests that the presence of an intact cortical cytoskeleton is required for zinc-induced cis multimerization. Subsequently, large adhesion platforms bridging interacting cells are formed through APLP1-APLP1 direct trans interactions. Taken together, our results provide direct evidence that APLP1 functions as a neuronal zinc-dependent adhesion protein and provide a more detailed understanding of the molecular mechanisms driving the formation of APLP1 adhesion platforms. Further, they show that fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy techniques are useful tools for the investigation of protein-protein interactions at cell-cell adhesion sites. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2017.11.2067 SN - 0006-3495 SN - 1542-0086 VL - 114 IS - 3 SP - 373A EP - 373A PB - Cell Press CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Luckner, Madlen A1 - Dunsing, Valentin A1 - Chiantia, Salvatore A1 - Hermann, Andreas T1 - Oligomerization and nuclear shuttling dynamics of viral proteins studied by quantitative molecular brightness analysis using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy T2 - Biophysical journal Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2017.11.1951 SN - 0006-3495 SN - 1542-0086 VL - 114 IS - 3 SP - 350A EP - 350A PB - Cell Press CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Jeglinski-Mende, Melinda A. A1 - Shaki, Samuel A1 - Fischer, Martin H. T1 - Rezension zu: Varma, Sashank ; Schwartz, Daniel L.: The mental representation of integers : an abstract-to-concrete shift in the understanding of mathematical concepts. - Cognition. - 121 (2011), 3. - S. 363 - 385 T2 - Frontiers in psychology KW - cognitive development KW - mental number line KW - negative numbers KW - embodied cognition KW - abstract concepts Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00209 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 9 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER - TY - GEN A1 - Sebold, Miriam A1 - Garbusow, Maria A1 - Nebe, S. A1 - Sundmacher, L. A1 - Kuitunen-Paul, Sören A1 - Wittchen, H. U. A1 - Smolka, M. A1 - Zimmermann, U. A1 - Rapp, Michael A. A1 - Huys, Q. A1 - Schlagenhauf, Florian A1 - Heinz, A. T1 - From goals to habits in alcohol dependence BT - association with treatment outcome and cognitive bias modification training T2 - European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists Y1 - 2018 SN - 0924-9338 SN - 1778-3585 VL - 48 SP - S274 EP - S274 PB - Elsevier CY - Paris ER - TY - GEN A1 - Garbusow, Maria A1 - Sommer, C. A1 - Nebe, S. A1 - Sebold, Miriam A1 - Kuitunen-Paul, Sören A1 - Wittchen, H. U. A1 - Smolka, M. A1 - Zimmermann, U. A1 - Rapp, Michael A. A1 - Huys, Q. A1 - Schlagenhauf, Florian A1 - Heinz, A. T1 - Pavlovian-instrumental transfer in the course of alcohol use disorder T2 - European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists N2 - Background: Pavlovian processes are thought to play an important role in the development, maintenance and relapse of alcohol dependence, possibly by influencing and usurping on- going thought and behavior. The influence of Pavlovian stimuli on on-going behavior is paradigmatically measured by Pavlovian-to-instrumental-transfer (PIT) tasks. These involve multiple stages and are complex. Whether increased PIT is involved in human alcohol dependence is uncertain. We therefore aimed to establish and validate a modified PIT paradigm that would be robust, consistent, and tolerated by healthy controls as well as by patients suffering from alcohol dependence, and to explore whether alcohol dependence is associated with enhanced Pavlovian-Instrumental transfer. Methods: 32 recently detoxified alcohol-dependent patients and 32 age and gender matched healthy controls performed a PIT task with instrumental go/no-go approach behaviours. The task involved both Pavlovian stimuli associated with monetary rewards and losses, and images of drinks. Results: Both patients and healthy controls showed a robust and temporally stable PIT effect. Strengths of PIT effects to drug-related and monetary conditioned stimuli were highly correlated. Patients more frequently showed a PIT effect and the effect was stronger in response to aversively conditioned CSs (conditioned suppression), but there was no group difference in response to appetitive CSs. Conclusion: The implementation of PIT has favorably robust properties in chronic alcohol- dependent patients and in healthy controls. It shows internal consistency between monetary and drug-related cues. The findings support an association of alcohol dependence with an increased propensity towards PIT. Y1 - 2018 SN - 0924-9338 SN - 1778-3585 VL - 48 SP - S546 EP - S546 PB - Elsevier CY - ISSY-LES-MOULINEAUX ER - TY - GEN A1 - Dammhahn, Melanie A1 - Dingemanse, Niels J. A1 - Niemelae, Petri T. A1 - Reale, Denis T1 - Pace-of-life syndromes BT - a framework for the adaptive integration of behaviour, physiology and life history T2 - Behavioral ecology and sociobiology N2 - This introduction to the topical collection on Pace-of-life syndromes: a framework for the adaptive integration of behaviour, physiology, and life history provides an overview of conceptual, theoretical, methodological, and empirical progress in research on pace-of-life syndromes (POLSs) over the last decade. The topical collection has two main goals. First, we briefly describe the history of POLS research and provide a refined definition of POLS that is applicable to various key levels of variation (genetic, individual, population, species). Second, we summarise the main lessons learned from current POLS research included in this topical collection. Based on an assessment of the current state of the theoretical foundations and the empirical support of the POLS hypothesis, we propose (i) conceptual refinements of theory, particularly with respect to the role of ecology in the evolution of (sexual dimorphism in) POLS, and (ii) methodological and statistical approaches to the study of POLS at all major levels of variation. This topical collection further holds (iii) key empirical examples demonstrating how POLS structures may be studied in wild populations of (non) human animals, and (iv) a modelling paper predicting POLS under various ecological conditions. Future POLS research will profit from the development of more explicit theoretical models and stringent empirical tests of model assumptions and predictions, increased focus on how ecology shapes (sex-specific) POLS structures at multiple hierarchical levels, and the usage of appropriate statistical tests and study designs. Significance statement As an introduction to the topical collection, we summarise current conceptual, theoretical, methodological and empirical progress in research on pace-of-life syndromes (POLSs), a framework for the adaptive integration of behaviour, physiology and life history at multiple hierarchical levels of variation (genetic, individual, population, species). Mixed empirical support of POLSs, particularly at the within-species level, calls for an evaluation and refinement of the hypothesis. We provide a refined definition of POLSs facilitating testable predictions. Future research on POLSs will profit from the development of more explicit theoretical models and stringent empirical tests of model assumptions and predictions, increased focus on how ecology shapes (sex-specific) POLSs structures at multiple hierarchical levels and the usage of appropriate statistical tests and study designs. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-018-2473-y SN - 0340-5443 SN - 1432-0762 VL - 72 IS - 3 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Liu, S. A1 - Kuschpel, M. S. A1 - Schad, Daniel A1 - Heinzel, Stephan A1 - Rapp, Michael A. A1 - Heinz, A. T1 - Effects of rest on learning processes T2 - European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroneuro.2017.12.099 SN - 0924-977X SN - 1873-7862 VL - 28 SP - S67 EP - S68 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - GEN A1 - Mazzio, Katherine A. A1 - Thulasimani, Monika Raja A1 - Ryll, Britta A1 - Kojda, Sandrino Danny A1 - Habicht, Klaus A1 - Raoux, Simone T1 - Synthetic manipulation of hybrid thermoelectric materials T2 - Abstracts of papers : joint conference / The Chemical Institute of Cananda, CIC, American Chemical Society, ACS Y1 - 2018 SN - 0065-7727 VL - 255 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Zöller, Gert A1 - Holschneider, Matthias T1 - Reply to “Comment on ‘The Maximum Possible and the Maximum Expected Earthquake Magnitude for Production‐Induced Earthquakes at the Gas Field in Groningen, The Netherlands’ by Gert Zöller and Matthias Holschneider” by Mathias Raschke T2 - Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1785/0120170131 SN - 0037-1106 SN - 1943-3573 VL - 108 IS - 2 SP - 1029 EP - 1030 PB - Seismological Society of America CY - Albany ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kochovski, Zdravko A1 - Jia, He A1 - Lu, Yan T1 - Morphological study of microgel-based colloidal systems by cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) T2 - Abstracts of papers : joint conference / The Chemical Institute of Cananda, CIC, American Chemical Society, ACS Y1 - 2018 SN - 0065-7727 VL - 256 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Shprits, Yuri A1 - Zhelavskaya, Irina A1 - Green, Janet C. A1 - Pulkkinen, Antti A. A1 - Horne, Richard B. A1 - Pitchford, David A1 - Glover, Alexi T1 - Discussions on Stakeholder Requirements for Space Weather-Related Models T2 - Space Weather: The International Journal of Research and Applications N2 - Participants of the 2017 European Space Weather Week in Ostend, Belgium, discussed the stakeholder requirements for space weather-related models. It was emphasized that stakeholders show an increased interest in space weather-related models. Participants of the meeting discussed particular prediction indicators that can provide first-order estimates of the impact of space weather on engineering systems. KW - 7924 KW - 7934 KW - 7959 Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2018SW001864 SN - 1542-7390 VL - 16 IS - 4 SP - 341 EP - 342 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Horowitz, Carol R. A1 - Fei, Kezhen A1 - Ramos, Michelle A. A1 - Hauser, Diane A1 - Ellis, Stephen B. A1 - Calman, Neil A1 - Böttinger, Erwin T1 - Receipt of genetic risk information significantly improves blood pressure control among African anecestry adults with hypertension BT - results of a randomized trail T2 - Journal of General Internal Medicine Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-018-4413-y SN - 0884-8734 SN - 1525-1497 VL - 33 SP - S322 EP - S323 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Higgs, Eric S. A1 - Harris, Jim A. A1 - Heger, Tina A1 - Hobbs, Richard J. A1 - Murphy, Stephen D. A1 - Suding, Katharine N. T1 - Keep ecological restoration open and flexible T2 - Nature Ecology & Evolution Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-018-0483-9 SN - 2397-334X VL - 2 IS - 4 SP - 580 EP - 580 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bordihn, Henning A1 - Nagy, Benedek A1 - Vaszil, György T1 - Preface: Non-classical models of automata and applications VIII T2 - RAIRO-Theoretical informatics and appli and applications Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/ita/2018019 SN - 0988-3754 SN - 1290-385X VL - 52 IS - 2-4 SP - 87 EP - 88 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hocher, Berthold A1 - Zeng, Shufei T1 - Clear the fog around parathyroid hormone assays BT - what do iPTH assays really measure? T2 - Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology KW - Assays KW - Biological Assay KW - CKD KW - oxidative stress KW - PTH Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.2215/CJN.01730218 SN - 1555-9041 SN - 1555-905X VL - 13 IS - 4 SP - 524 EP - 526 PB - American Society of Nephrology CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Jacob, Gunnar A1 - Clahsen, Harald T1 - Introduction BT - priming paradigms in bilingualism research T2 - Bilingualism : language and cognition N2 - The present thematic set of studies comprises five concise review articles on the use of priming paradigms in different areas of bilingualism research. Their aim is to provide readers with a quick overview of how priming paradigms can be employed in particular subfields of bilingualism research and to make readers aware of the methodological issues that need to be considered when using priming techniques. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S1366728918000135 SN - 1366-7289 SN - 1469-1841 VL - 21 IS - 3 SP - 435 EP - 436 PB - Cambridge Univ. Press CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Lenzi, Roland A1 - Neugebauer, Jonas A1 - Weißflog, Clemens T1 - Militärhistorische Geländebegehung im Rahmen eines Seminars des Lehrstuhls »War and Conflict Studies« an der Universität Potsdam, Königgrätz, 8. bis 11. Mai 2017 T1 - "Operation History 2017" Military History Field Examination in the Context of the Chair Seminars "War and Conflict Studies" at the University of Potsdam, Koeniggratz, 8th till 11th May 2017 T2 - Militärgeschichtliche Zeitschrift Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1515/mgzs-2018-0006 SN - 2193-2336 SN - 2196-6850 VL - 77 IS - 1 SP - 122 EP - 127 PB - De Gruyter CY - Berlin ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kaminski, Jakob A1 - Schlagenhauf, Florian A1 - Rapp, Michael A. A1 - Awasthi, Swapnil A1 - Ruggeri, Barbara A1 - Deserno, Lorenz A1 - Laura, Daedelow A1 - Banaschewski, Tobias A1 - Bokde, Arun A1 - Quinlan, Erin Burke A1 - Buechel, Christian A1 - Bromberg, Uli A1 - Desrivieres, Sylvane A1 - Flor, Herta A1 - Frouin, Vincent A1 - Garavan, Hugh A1 - Gowland, Penny A1 - Ittermann, Bernd A1 - Martinot, Jean-Luc A1 - Martinot, Marie-Laure Paillere A1 - Nees, Frauke A1 - Orfanos, Dimitri Papadopoulos A1 - Paus, Tomas A1 - Poustka, Luise A1 - Smolka, Michael A1 - Froehner, Juliane A1 - Walter, Henrik A1 - Whelan, Robert A1 - Ripke, Stephan A1 - Schumann, Gunter A1 - Heinz, Andreas T1 - Variance in Dopaminergic Markers BT - a possible marker of individual differences in IQ? T2 - Biological psychiatry : a journal of psychiatric neuroscience and therapeutics ; a publication of the Society of Biological Psychiatry KW - Intelligence KW - Dopamine KW - Epigenetic Biomarkers KW - Reward Anticipation KW - Polygenic Risk Score Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2018.02.311 SN - 0006-3223 SN - 1873-2402 VL - 83 IS - 9 SP - S118 EP - S118 PB - Elsevier CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Khajooei, Mina A1 - Lin, Chiao-I A1 - Steffan, Müller A1 - Mayer, Frank T1 - Effect of Instability in Legpress Testing on Strength & Muscle Activity in Functional Ankle Instability T2 - Medicine and science in sports and exercise : official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/:10.1249/01.mss.0000537073.01736.db SN - 0195-9131 SN - 1530-0315 VL - 50 IS - 5S SP - 602 EP - 602 PB - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - GEN A1 - Lendlein, Andreas T1 - Fabrication of reprogrammable shape-memory polymer actuators for robotics T2 - Science robotics N2 - Shape-memory polymer actuators, whose actuation geometry and switching temperatures are reprogrammable by physical fabrication schemes, were recently suggested for robotics with the option for self-healing and degradability. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/scirobotics.aat9090 SN - 2470-9476 VL - 3 IS - 18 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Brand, Ralf A1 - Ulrich, Lukas T1 - I can see it in your face BT - Exercisers’ and non-exercisers’ automatic affective valuations of exercise T2 - Journal of sport & exercise psychology Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1123/jsep.2018-0169 SN - 0895-2779 SN - 1543-2904 VL - 40 SP - S77 EP - S78 PB - Human Kinetics Publ. CY - Champaign ER - TY - GEN A1 - Caupin, Frederic A1 - Holten, Vincent A1 - Qiu, Chen A1 - Guillerm, Emmanuel A1 - Wilke, Max A1 - Frenz, Martin A1 - Teixeira, Jose A1 - Soper, Alan K. T1 - Comment on "Maxima in the thermodynamic response and correlation functions of deeply supercooled water" T2 - Science N2 - Kim et al. recently measured the structure factor of deeply supercooled water droplets (Reports, 22 December 2017, p. 1589). We raise several concerns about their data analysis and interpretation. In our opinion, the reported data do not lead to clear conclusions about the origins of water’s anomalies. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aat1634 SN - 0036-8075 SN - 1095-9203 VL - 360 IS - 6390 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Fernando, Raquel A1 - Drescher, Cathleen A1 - Deubel, Stefanie A1 - Grune, Tilman A1 - Castro, Jose Pedro T1 - Distinct proteasomal activity for fast and slow twitch skeletal muscle during aging T2 - Free radical biology and medicine : the official journal of the Oxygen Society, a constituent member of the International Society for Free Radical Research N2 - Skeletal muscle alterations during aging lead to dysfunctional metabolism, correlating with frailty and early mortality. The loss of proteostasis is a hallmark of aging. Whether proteostasis loss plays a role in muscle aging remains elusive. To address this question we collected muscles, Soleus (SOL, type I) and Extensor digitorum longus (EDL, type II), from young (4 months) and old (25 months) C57BL/6 mice and evaluated the proteasomal system. Initial work showed decreased 26 S activity in old SOL. EDL displayed lower proteasomal activity in both ages compared to any of the SOL ages. Moreover, in order to understand if during aging there is the so-called “fiber switch from fast-to-slow”, we performed western blots against sMHC and fMHC (slow and fast myosin heavy chain, respectively). Preliminary results suggest that young SOL is composed by slow twitch fibers but also contains fast twitch fibers, while young EDL seems to be mostly composed by fast twitch fibers that level down during aging, suggesting the switch. As a conclusion, EDL seems to have less proteasomal activity, however, if this is a contributor or a consequence to the muscle fiber switch during aging still needs further investigation. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2018.04.393 SN - 0891-5849 SN - 1873-4596 VL - 120 SP - S119 EP - S119 PB - Elsevier CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Garcin, Yannick A1 - Deschamps, Pierre A1 - Menot, Guillemette A1 - de Saulieu, Geoffroy A1 - Schefuss, Enno A1 - Sebag, David A1 - Dupont, Lydie M. A1 - Oslisly, Richard A1 - Brademann, Brian A1 - Mbusnum, Kevin G. A1 - Onana, Jean-Michel A1 - Ako, Andrew A. A1 - Epp, Laura Saskia A1 - Tjallingii, Rik A1 - Strecker, Manfred A1 - Brauer, Achim A1 - Sachse, Dirk T1 - Human activity is the most probable trigger of the late Holocene rainforest crisis in Western Central Africa Reply T2 - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1805582115 SN - 0027-8424 VL - 115 IS - 21 SP - E4735 EP - E4736 PB - National Acad. of Sciences CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Garbusow, Maria A1 - Sommer, Christian A1 - Nebe, Stephan A1 - Sebold, Miriam A1 - Kuitunen-Paul, Sören A1 - Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich A1 - Smolka, Michael N. A1 - Zimmermann, Ulrich S. A1 - Rapp, Michael A. A1 - Huys, Quentin J. M. A1 - Schlagenhauf, Florian A1 - Heinz, Andreas T1 - Multi-level evidence of general pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer in alcohol use disorder T2 - Alcoholism : clinical and experimental research ; the official journal of the American Medical Society on Alcoholism and the Research Society on Alcoholism Y1 - 2018 SN - 0145-6008 SN - 1530-0277 VL - 42 SP - 128A EP - 128A PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Santer, Svetlana T1 - Light responsive soft nano-objects T2 - Abstracts of papers : joint conference / The Chemical Institute of Cananda, CIC, American Chemical Society, ACS Y1 - 2018 SN - 0065-7727 VL - 256 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Schulze, Matthias Bernd A1 - Martinez-Gonzalez, Miguel A. A1 - Fung, Teresa T. A1 - Lichtenstein, Alice H. A1 - Forouhi, Nita G. T1 - Food based dietary patterns and chronic disease prevention T2 - BMJ-British medical journal N2 - Matthias B Schulze and colleagues discuss current knowledge on the associations between dietary patterns and cancer, coronary heart disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes, focusing on areas of uncertainty and future research directions. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k2396 SN - 1756-1833 VL - 361 PB - BMJ Publishing Group CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Saliba, Michael A1 - Stolterfoht, Martin A1 - Wolff, Christian Michael A1 - Neher, Dieter A1 - Abate, Antonio T1 - Measuring aging stability of perovskite solar cells T2 - Joule Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joule.2018.05.005 SN - 2542-4351 VL - 2 IS - 6 SP - 1019 EP - 1024 PB - Cell Press CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Garcin, Yannick A1 - Deschamps, Pierre A1 - Menot, Guillemette A1 - de Saulieu, Geoffroy A1 - Schefuss, Enno A1 - Sebag, David A1 - Dupont, Lydie M. A1 - Oslisly, Richard A1 - Brademann, Brian A1 - Mbusnum, Kevin G. A1 - Onana, Jean-Michel A1 - Ako, Andrew A. A1 - Epp, Laura Saskia A1 - Tjallingii, Rik A1 - Strecker, Manfred A1 - Brauer, Achim A1 - Sachse, Dirk T1 - No evidence for climate variability during the late Holocene rainforest crisis in Western Central Africa REPLY T2 - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1808481115 SN - 0027-8424 VL - 115 IS - 29 SP - E6674 EP - E6675 PB - National Acad. of Sciences CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kewenig, Viktor A1 - Zhou, Yuefang A1 - Fischer, Martin H. T1 - Commentary: Robots as intentional agents BT - Using neuroscientific methods to make robots appear more social T2 - Frontiers in psychology KW - intentionality KW - social robots KW - verbal reports KW - humanoid KW - turing test Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01131 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 9 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER - TY - GEN A1 - Lazuras, Lambros A1 - Barkoukis, Vassilis A1 - Loukovitis, Andreas A1 - Brand, Ralf A1 - Hudson, Andy A1 - Mallia, Luca A1 - Michaelides, Michalis A1 - Muzi, Milena A1 - Petroczi, Andrea A1 - Zelli, Arnaldo T1 - Corrigendum: "I Want It All, and I Want It Now": Lifetime Prevalence and Reasons for Using and Abstaining from Controlled Performance and Appearance Enhancing Substances (PAES) among Young Exercisers and Amateur Athletes in Five European Countries (Frontiers in psychology. - 8 (2017), 717.) T2 - Frontiers in psychology KW - doping KW - behavioral reasoning KW - exercise KW - fitness KW - recreational sport KW - young adults Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01162 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 9 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER - TY - GEN A1 - Brewka, Gerhard A1 - Schaub, Torsten A1 - Woltran, Stefan T1 - Interview with Gerhard Brewka T2 - Künstliche Intelligenz N2 - This interview with Gerhard Brewka was conducted by correspondance in May 2018. The question set was compiled by Torsten Schaub and Stefan Woltran. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s13218-018-0549-5 SN - 0933-1875 SN - 1610-1987 VL - 32 IS - 2-3 SP - 219 EP - 221 PB - Springer CY - Heidelberg ER - TY - GEN A1 - Lifschitz, Vladimir A1 - Schaub, Torsten A1 - Woltran, Stefan T1 - Interview with Vladimir Lifschitz T2 - Künstliche Intelligenz N2 - This interview with Vladimir Lifschitz was conducted by Torsten Schaub at the University of Texas at Austin in August 2017. The question set was compiled by Torsten Schaub and Stefan Woltran. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s13218-018-0552-x SN - 0933-1875 SN - 1610-1987 VL - 32 IS - 2-3 SP - 213 EP - 218 PB - Springer CY - Heidelberg ER - TY - GEN A1 - Schaub, Torsten A1 - Woltran, Stefan T1 - Special issue on answer set programming T2 - Künstliche Intelligenz Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s13218-018-0554-8 SN - 0933-1875 SN - 1610-1987 VL - 32 IS - 2-3 SP - 101 EP - 103 PB - Springer CY - Heidelberg ER - TY - GEN A1 - Geissman, John A1 - Jolivet, Laurent A1 - Niemi, Nathan A1 - Schildgen, Taylor F. T1 - Thank you to our 2017 Peer Reviewers T2 - Tectonics N2 - An essential, respected, and critical aspect of the modern practice of science and scientific publishing is peer review. The process of peer review facilitates best practices in scientific conduct and communication, ensuring that manuscripts published as accurate, valuable, and clearly communicated. The over 152 papers published in Tectonics in 2017 benefit from the time, effort, and expertise of our reviewers who have provided thoughtfully considered advice on each manuscript. This role is critical to advancing our understanding of the evolution of the continents and their margins, as these reviews lead to even clearer and higher-quality papers. In 2017, the over 423 papers submitted to Tectonics were the beneficiaries of more than 786 reviews provided by 562 members of the tectonics community and related disciplines. To everyone who has volunteered their time and intellect to peer reviewing, thank you for helping Tectonics and all other AGU Publications provide the best science possible. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1029/2018TC005194 SN - 0278-7407 SN - 1944-9194 VL - 37 IS - 8 SP - 2272 EP - 2277 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Clark, Peter U. A1 - Mix, Alan C. A1 - Eby, Michael A1 - Levermann, Anders A1 - Rogelj, Joeri A1 - Nauels, Alexander A1 - Wrathall, David J. T1 - Sea-level commitment as a gauge for climate policy T2 - Nature climate change N2 - A well-defined relationship between global mean sea-level rise and cumulative carbon emissions can be used to inform policy about emission limits to prevent dangerous and essentially permanent anthropogenic interference with the climate system. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-018-0226-6 SN - 1758-678X SN - 1758-6798 VL - 8 IS - 8 SP - 653 EP - 655 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Jay, Raphael J. A1 - Norell, Jesper A1 - Kunnus, Kristjan A1 - Lundberg, Marcus A1 - Gaffney, Kelly A1 - Wernet, Philippe A1 - Odelius, Michael A1 - Föhlisch, Alexander T1 - Dynamcis of local charge densities and metal-ligand covalency in iron complexes from femtosecond resonant inelastic soft X-ray scattering T2 - Abstracts of Papers of the American Chemical Society Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-370051 SN - 0065-7727 VL - 256 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Salzwedel, Annett A1 - Hadzic, Miralem A1 - Buhlert, Hermann A1 - Völler, Heinz T1 - Impact of self-assessment of return to work on employable discharge from multi-component cardiac rehabilitation T2 - European heart journal N2 - Impact of self-assessment of return to work on employable discharge from multi-component cardiac rehabilitation. Retrospective unicentric analysis of routine data from cardiac rehabilitation in patients below 65 years of age. Presentation in the "Cardiovascular rehabilitation revisited" high impact abstract session during ESC Congress 2018. Y1 - 2018 SN - 0195-668X SN - 1522-9645 VL - 39 SP - 21 EP - 22 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - GEN A1 - Mehrabi, Pedram A1 - Schulz, Eike A1 - Müller-Werkmeister, Henrike A1 - Persch, Elke A1 - De Gasparo, Raoul A1 - Diederich, Francois A1 - Tellkamp, Friedjof A1 - Pai, Emil F. A1 - Miller, R. J. Dwayne T1 - Time-resolved crystallography via an interlacing approach allows elucidation of milliseconds to seconds time delays T2 - Acta Crystallographica Section A KW - Time-resolved crystallography KW - crystallography KW - enzymology KW - method development Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1107/S205327331809321X SN - 2053-2733 VL - 74 SP - E138 EP - E138 PB - International Union of Crystallography CY - Chester ER - TY - GEN A1 - Gianelli, Claudia A1 - Gentilucci, Maurizio T1 - Editorial: Reaching to Grasp Cognition: Analyzing Motor Behavior to Investigate Social Interactions T2 - Frontiers in psychology KW - kinematics KW - social cognition KW - action observation KW - imitation KW - joint action KW - complementary actions KW - cooperation and competition KW - embodied cognition Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01236 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 9 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER - TY - GEN A1 - Norell, Jesper A1 - Jay, Raphael A1 - Hantschmann, Markus A1 - Eckert, Sebastian A1 - Guo, Meiyuan A1 - Gaffney, Kelly A1 - Wernet, Philippe A1 - Lundberg, Marcus A1 - Föhlisch, Alexander A1 - Odelius, Michael T1 - Fingerprints of electronic, spin and structural dynamics from resonant inelastic soft x-ray scattering in transient photo-chemical species T2 - Physical chemistry, chemical physics N2 - We describe how inversion symmetry separation of electronic state manifolds in resonant inelastic soft X-ray scattering (RIXS) can be applied to probe excited-state dynamics with compelling selectivity. In a case study of Fe L3-edge RIXS in the ferricyanide complex Fe(CN)63−, we demonstrate with multi-configurational restricted active space spectrum simulations how the information content of RIXS spectral fingerprints can be used to unambiguously separate species of different electronic configurations, spin multiplicities, and structures, with possible involvement in the decay dynamics of photo-excited ligand-to-metal charge-transfer. Specifically, we propose that this could be applied to confirm or reject the presence of a hitherto elusive transient Quartet species. Thus, RIXS offers a particular possibility to settle a recent controversy regarding the decay pathway, and we expect the technique to be similarly applicable in other model systems of photo-induced dynamics. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1039/c7cp08326b SN - 1463-9084 IS - 20 SP - 7243 EP - 7253 PB - RSC Publ. CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Dani, Alessandro A1 - Taeuber, Karoline A1 - Zhang, Weiyi A1 - Schlaad, Helmut A1 - Yuan, Jiayin T1 - Stable covalently photo-cross-linked porous poly(ionic liquid) membrane with gradient pore size T2 - Abstracts of papers : joint conference / The Chemical Institute of Cananda, CIC, American Chemical Society, ACS N2 - Porous polyelectrolyte membranes stable in a highly ionic environment are obtained by covalent crosslinking of an imidazolium-based poly(ionic liquid). The crosslinking reaction involves the UV light-induced thiol-ene (click) chemistry, and the phase separation, occurring during the crosslinking step, generates a fully interconnected porous structure in the membrane. The porosity is on the order of the micrometer scale and the membrane shows a gradient of pore size across the membrane cross-section. The membrane can separate polystyrene latex particles of different size and undergoes actuation in contact with acetone due to the asymmetric porous structure. Y1 - 2018 SN - 0065-7727 VL - 256 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Best, Robert B. A1 - Zheng, Wenwei A1 - Borgia, Alessandro A1 - Buholzer, Karin A1 - Borgia, Madeleine B. A1 - Hofmann, Hagen A1 - Soranno, Andrea A1 - Nettels, Daniel A1 - Gast, Klaus A1 - Grishaev, Alexander A1 - Schuler, Benjamin T1 - Comment on "Innovative scattering analysis shows that hydrophobic disordered proteins are expanded in water" T2 - Science N2 - Riback et al. (Reports, 13 October 2017, p. 238) used small-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) experiments to infer a degree of compaction for unfolded proteins in water versus chemical denaturant that is highly consistent with the results from Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments. There is thus no "contradiction" between the two methods, nor evidence to support their claim that commonly used FRET fluorophores cause protein compaction. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aar7101 SN - 0036-8075 SN - 1095-9203 VL - 361 IS - 6405 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Jamnok, Jutatip A1 - Sanchaisuriya, Kanokwan A1 - Yamsri, Supawadee A1 - Fucharoen, Goonnapa A1 - Fucharoen, Supan A1 - Schweigert, Florian J. A1 - Sanchaisuriya, Pattara T1 - Application of a new portable nephelometer for screening thalassemia in countries with limited resources T2 - International Journal of Laboratory Hematology Y1 - 2018 SN - 1751-5521 SN - 1751-553X VL - 40 SP - 62 EP - 62 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Miklashevsky, Alex A. A1 - Lindemann, Oliver A1 - Fischer, Martin H. T1 - Think of the future in the right way BT - Processing time activates the motor system T2 - Cognitive processing : international quarterly of cognitive science Y1 - 2018 SN - 1612-4782 SN - 1612-4790 VL - 19 SP - S46 EP - S46 PB - Springer CY - Heidelberg ER - TY - GEN A1 - Jamnok, Jutatip A1 - Sanchaisuriya, Kanokwan A1 - Yamsri, Supawadee A1 - Fucharoen, Goonnapa A1 - Fucharoen, Supan A1 - Schweigert, Florian J. A1 - Sanchaisuriya, Pattara T1 - Application of a new portable nephelometer for screening thalassemia in countries with limited resources T2 - International journal of laboratory hematology N2 - One-tube osmotic fragility (OF) test is a rapid test used widely for screening thalassemia in countries with limited resources. The test has important limitation in that its accuracy relies on observers’ experience. The iCheck Turbidity is a prototype of portable nephelometer developed by BioAnalyt (Bioanalyt GmbH, Germany). In this study, we assessed the applicability of the iCheck Turbidity, for checking turbidity of the OF-test Y1 - 2018 SN - 1751-5521 SN - 1751-553X VL - 40 SP - 62 EP - 62 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Sicard, Adrien A1 - Lenhard, Michael T1 - Capsella T2 - Current biology Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2018.06.033 SN - 0960-9822 SN - 1879-0445 VL - 28 IS - 17 SP - R920 EP - R921 PB - Cell Press CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Granacher, Urs A1 - Puta, Christian A1 - Gabriel, Holger H. W. A1 - Behm, David George A1 - Arampatzis, Adamantios T1 - Neuromuscular Training and Adaptations in Youth Athletes T2 - Frontiers in physiology KW - strength training KW - plyometric training KW - physical fitness KW - injury prevention KW - athletic performance Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.01264 SN - 1664-042X VL - 9 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER - TY - GEN A1 - Schwerbel, Kristin A1 - Kamitz, Anne A1 - Jaehnert, Markus A1 - Gottmann, P. A1 - Schumacher, Fabian A1 - Kleuser, Burkhard A1 - Haltenhof, T. A1 - Heyd, F. A1 - Roden, Michael A1 - Chadt, Alexandra A1 - Al-Hasani, Hadi A1 - Jonas, W. A1 - Vogel, Heike A1 - Schürmann, Annette T1 - Two immune-related GTPases prevent from hepatic fat accumulation by inducing autophagy T2 - Diabetologia : journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) Y1 - 2018 SN - 0012-186X SN - 1432-0428 VL - 61 SP - S259 EP - S259 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Grünthal, Gottfried A1 - Stromeyer, Dietrich A1 - Bosse, Christian A1 - Cotton, Fabrice A1 - Bindi, Dino T1 - Correction to: The probabilistic seismic hazard assessment of Germanyversion 2016, considering the range of epistemic uncertainties and aleatory variability (vol 16, pg 4339, 2018) T2 - Bulletin of earthquake engineering : official publication of the European Association for Earthquake Engineering N2 - One paragraph of the manuscript of the paper has been inadvertently omitted in the very final stage of its compilation due to a technical mistake. Since this paragraph discusses the declustering of the used earthquake catalogue and is therefore necessary for the understanding of the seismicity data preprocessing, the authors decided to provide this paragraph in form of a correction. The respective paragraph belongs to chapter 2 of the paper, where it was placed originally, and should be inserted into the published paper before the second to the last paragraph. The omitted text reads as follows: Y1 - 2918 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10518-018-0398-5 SN - 1570-761X SN - 1573-1456 VL - 16 IS - 10 SP - 4397 EP - 4398 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - GEN A1 - Tammen, Harald A1 - Koemhoff, Martin A1 - Mark, Michael A1 - Hocher, Berthold A1 - Delic, Denis A1 - Hess, Rüdiger A1 - von Eynatten, Maximilian A1 - Klein, Thomas T1 - Linagliptin treatment is associated with improved cobalamin (vitamin B-12) storage in mice and potentially in humans T2 - Diabetologia : journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) Y1 - 2018 SN - 0012-186X SN - 1432-0428 VL - 61 SP - S252 EP - S253 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Send, T. S. A1 - Gilles, M. A1 - Codd, V. A1 - Wolf, I. A. C. A1 - Bardtke, S. A1 - Streit, Fabian A1 - Strohmaier, Jana A1 - Frank, Josef A1 - Schendel, D. A1 - Sutterlin, M. W. A1 - Denniff, M. A1 - Laucht, Manfred A1 - Samani, N. J. A1 - Deuschle, Michael A1 - Rietschel, Marcella A1 - Witt, Stephanie H. T1 - Telomere length in newborns is related to maternal stress during pregnancy Response T2 - Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology KW - Predictive markers KW - Risk factors Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41386-018-0079-8 SN - 0893-133X SN - 1740-634X VL - 43 IS - 11 SP - 2164 EP - 2164 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Albers, Philip A1 - Uestuen, Suayib A1 - Witzel, Katja A1 - Bornke, Frederik T1 - Identification of a novel target of the bacterial effector HopZ1a T2 - Phytopathology N2 - The plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae is a gram-negative bacterium which infects a wide range of plant species including important crops plants. To suppress plant immunity and cause disease P.syringae injects type-III effector proteins (T3Es) into the plant cell cytosol. In this study, we identified a novel target of the well characterized bacterial T3E HopZ1a. HopZ1a is an acetyltransferase that was shown to disrupt vesicle transport during innate immunity by acetylating tubulin. Using a yeast-two-hybrid screen approach, we identified a REMORIN (REM) protein from tobacco as a novel HopZ1a target. HopZ1a interacts with REM at the plasma membrane (PM) as shown by split-YFP experiments. Interestingly, we found that PBS1, a well-known kinase involved in plant immunity also interacts with REM in pull-down assays, and at the PM as shown by BiFC. Furthermore, we confirmed that REM is phosphorylated by PBS1 in vitro. Overexpression of REM provokes the upregulation of defense genes and leads to disease-like phenotypes pointing to a role of REM in plant immune signaling. Further protein-protein interaction studies reveal novel REM binding partners with a possible role in plant immune signaling. Thus, REM might act as an assembly hub for an immune signaling complex targeted by HopZ1a. Taken together, this is the first report describing that a REM protein is targeted by a bacterial effector. How HopZ1a might mechanistically manipulate the plant immune system through interfering with REM function will be discussed. Y1 - 2018 SN - 0031-949X SN - 1943-7684 VL - 108 IS - 10 PB - American Phytopathological Society CY - Saint Paul ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kleuser, Burkhard T1 - The enigma of sphingolipids in health and disease T2 - International journal of molecular sciences Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms19103126 SN - 1422-0067 VL - 19 IS - 10 PB - MDPI CY - Basel ER - TY - GEN A1 - Henze, Andrea T1 - Proteinoxidation als Indikator des Alterungsphänotyps und Target einer individualisierten Ernährungsintervention (ProAID) T1 - Protein Oxidation as an Indicator of the Aging Phenotype and Target of an individualized Nutritional Intervention (ProAID) T2 - Ernährungs-Umschau : Forschung & Praxis N2 - Oxidative posttranslationale Modifikationen endogener Proteine werden v. a. durch reaktive Sauerstoff- und Stickstoffspezies (engl:. Reactive Oxygen Species, ROS, reactive nitrogen species, RNS) hervorgerufen und können sowohl reversibel (z. B. Disulfidbindungen) als auch irreversibel (z. B. Proteincarbonyle) erfolgen [1–3]. Lange wurde angenommen, dass oxidative posttranslationale Proteinmodifikationen (oxPTPM) nur von untergeordneter Bedeutung für den Metabolismus sind. Tatsächlich handelt es sich jedoch um einen physiologischen Prozess, der über die Modulation der Proteinstruktur auch die Proteinfunktion (z. B. Enzymaktivität, Stabilität) und somit zahlreiche Stoffwechselwege wie den Energiestoffwechsel, die Immunfunktion, die vaskuläre Funktion sowie Apoptose und Genexpression beeinflussen kann. Die Bildung von oxPTPM ist dabei hochreguliert und hängt u. a. von der Proteinstruktur, der Verfügbarkeit von ROS und RNS sowie dem lokalen Mikromilieu der Zelle ab [2, 4]. Y1 - 2018 SN - 0174-0008 VL - 65 IS - 10 SP - M566 EP - M567 PB - Umschau-Zeitschriftenverl. CY - Frankfurt, Main ER - TY - GEN A1 - Warschburger, Petra A1 - Sproesser, Gudrun A1 - Zahn, Daniela T1 - Fachgruppe Gesundheitspsychologie: Methoden sind wichtig, Inhalte aber genauso T1 - Department of Health Psychology Methods are important, but Content is the same T2 - Psychologische Rundschau : offizielles Organ der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Psychologie Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1026/0033-3042/a000418 SN - 0033-3042 SN - 2190-6238 VL - 69 IS - 4 SP - 340 EP - 341 PB - Hogrefe CY - Göttingen ER - TY - GEN A1 - Messerschmidt, Katrin A1 - Machens, Fabian A1 - Hochrein, Lena A1 - Naseri, Gita T1 - Orthogonal, light-inducible protein expression platform in yeast Sacchararomyces cerevisiae T2 - New biotechnology Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbt.2018.05.153 SN - 1871-6784 SN - 1876-4347 VL - 44 SP - S19 EP - S19 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - GEN A1 - Uhlig, Katja A1 - Gehre, Christian P. A1 - Kammerer, Sarah A1 - Küpper, Jan-Heiner A1 - Coleman, Charles Dominic A1 - Püschel, Gerhard Paul A1 - Duschl, Claus T1 - Real-time monitoring of oxygen consumption of hepatocytes in a microbioreactor T2 - Toxicology letters Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.toxlet.2018.06.652 SN - 0378-4274 SN - 1879-3169 VL - 295 SP - S115 EP - S115 PB - Elsevier CY - Clare ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bittlingmayer, Uwe H. A1 - Gerdes, Jürgen A1 - Pinheiro, Paulo A1 - Dege, Martin A1 - Bauer, Ullrich A1 - Jäntsch, Christian A1 - Kirchhoff, Sandra A1 - Knigge, Michael A1 - Köpfer, Andreas A1 - Markovic, Sandra A1 - Okcu, Gözde A1 - Scharenberg, Katja T1 - Health Promoting Schools (HPS) and the impact of inclusion BT - the StiEL-project T2 - The European Journal of Public Health N2 - Background: The overall goal of the project ‘StiEL’ is to contribute to the professional development of teachers and other educational staff working at German secondary schools. The aim is to develop an evidence-based training concept for the inclusion of students with diverse abilities. The project is organized as a collaborative research effort of three partnering institutions and funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research from 2018-2021. Methods: To support the on-going transition towards inclusive school practices, a multi-stage approach is envisaged. The first phase aims at a scoping review of existing literature and programmes on inclusion. The overview is supplemented by interviews with school staff members. Training modules are developed in the second project phase. The third phase of StiEL puts the newly developed training program into practice. The knowledge and skills acquired by the participants through the training as well as the teaching and management of inclusive classrooms after the training are evaluated through longitudinal and ethnographic approaches. The final project phase creates a best practice manual and makes the modules available via open access databases. Results: The presentation will focus on the first phase and try to explore the health-related consequences of the transition towards an inclusive school system in Germany for different participants. We will present preliminary results of expert interviews as well as some results from the literature screening. Due to our findings the current practice on German schools towards the road to inclusion is very stressful for all participants. We will explore recommendations for health promoting schools under conditions of inclusion. Conclusions: In terms of health-related consequences for all participants, the road to inclusion is very ambitious but also very stressful. Regarding the development of an inclusive school system, we need to focus much more on health and health promotion. Y1 - 2018 SN - 1101-1262 SN - 1464-360X VL - 28 IS - Supp. 4 SP - 287 EP - 288 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - GEN A1 - Dahm, Torsten A1 - Heimann, Sebastian A1 - Funke, Sigward A1 - Wendt, Siegfried A1 - Rappsilber, Ivo A1 - Bindi, Dino A1 - Plenefisch, Thomas A1 - Cotton, Fabrice T1 - Correction to: Seismicity in the block mountains between Halle and Leipzig, Central Germany: centroid moment tensors, ground motion simulation, and felt intensities of two M approximate to 3 earthquakes in 2015 and 2017 (vol 22, pg 985, 2018) T2 - Journal of seismology Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10950-018-9773-6 SN - 1383-4649 SN - 1573-157X VL - 22 IS - 6 SP - 1669 EP - 1671 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - GEN A1 - Gräf, Ralph T1 - Comparative Biology of Centrosomal Structures in Eukaryotes T2 - Cells N2 - The centrosome is not only the largest and most sophisticated protein complex within a eukaryotic cell, in the light of evolution, it is also one of its most ancient organelles. This special issue of "Cells" features representatives of three main, structurally divergent centrosome types, i.e., centriole-containing centrosomes, yeast spindle pole bodies (SPBs), and amoebozoan nucleus-associated bodies (NABs). Here, I discuss their evolution and their key-functions in microtubule organization, mitosis, and cytokinesis. Furthermore, I provide a brief history of centrosome research and highlight recently emerged topics, such as the role of centrioles in ciliogenesis, the relationship of centrosomes and centriolar satellites, the integration of centrosomal structures into the nuclear envelope and the involvement of centrosomal components in non-centrosomal microtubule organization. KW - centrosome KW - centriole KW - cilium KW - basal body KW - spindle pole body KW - SPB KW - nucleus-associated body KW - NAB KW - microtubules Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/cells7110202 SN - 2073-4409 VL - 7 IS - 11 PB - MDPI CY - Basel ER - TY - GEN A1 - Balazadeh, Salma A1 - Müller-Röber, Bernd T1 - A balance to death T2 - Nature plants N2 - Leaf senescence plays a crucial role in nutrient recovery in late-stage plant development and requires vast transcriptional reprogramming by transcription factors such as ORESARA1 (ORE1). A proteolytic mechanism is now found to control ORE1 degradation, and thus senescence, during nitrogen starvation. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41477-018-0279-6 SN - 2055-026X SN - 2055-0278 VL - 4 IS - 11 SP - 863 EP - 864 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hasenbring, Monika Ilona A1 - Levenig, Claudia A1 - Hallner, D. A1 - Puschmann, Anne-Katrin A1 - Weiffen, A. A1 - Kleinert, Jens A1 - Belz, Johanna A1 - Schiltenwolf, Marcus A1 - Pfeifer, Ann-Christin A1 - Heidari, Jahan A1 - Kellmann, Michael A1 - Wippert, Pia-Maria T1 - Screeninginstrumente BT - mehr Licht als Schatten T2 - Der Schmerz : Organ der Deutschen Gesellschaft zum Studium des Schmerzes, der Österreichischen Schmerzgesellschaft und der Deutschen Interdisziplinären Vereinigung für Schmerztherapie Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00482-018-0340-4 SN - 0932-433X SN - 1432-2129 VL - 32 IS - 6 SP - 479 EP - 481 PB - Springer Medizin Verlag GmbH CY - Heidelberg ER - TY - GEN A1 - Weymar, Mathias A1 - Ventura-Bort, Carlos A1 - Wirkner, Janine A1 - Wendt, Julia A1 - Hamm, Alfons T1 - Effects of Transcutaneous Vagus Nerve Stimulation (TVNS) on unpleasant picture processing and long-term memory T2 - Psychophysiology : journal of the Society for Psychophysiological Research Y1 - 2018 SN - 0048-5772 SN - 1469-8986 VL - 55 SP - S18 EP - S18 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Ribes, Pablo A1 - Ventura-Bort, Carlos A1 - Poy, Rosario A1 - Segarra, Pilar A1 - Rodriguez, Sara A1 - Branchadell, Victoria A1 - Molto, Javier T1 - N2 and P3 modulation in a modified go/nogo task BT - the role of disinhibition (Poster) T2 - Psychophysiology : journal of the Society for Psychophysiological Research N2 - This study examined the relationships between the three phenotypic domains of the triarchic model of psychopathy —boldness, meanness, disinhibition— and electrophysiological indices of inhibitory control (NoGo-N2/NoGo-P3). EEG data from a 256-channel dense array were recorded while participants (135 un-dergraduates assessed via the Triarchic Psychopathy Measure) performed a Go/NoGo task with three types of stimuli (60% frequent-Go, 20% infrequent-Go, 20% infrequent-NoGo). N2 was defined as the mean amplitude between 240 ms and 340 ms after stimuli onset over fronto-central sensors on correct trials; P300 was defined as the mean amplitude between 350 ms and 550 ms after stimuli onset over centro-parietal sensors on correct trials. Multiple regression analyses using gender-corrected triarchic scores as predictors revealed that only Disinhibition scores significantly predicted reduced NoGo-N2 amplitudes (3.5% explained variance, beta weight = .23, p < .05) and reduced P3 amplitudes for NoGo and infrequent-Go trials (3.1 and 3.2% explained variance, respectively, beta weights = -.21, ps < .05). Our results indicate that high disinhibition entails deviations in early conflict monitoring processes (reduced NoGo-N2), as well as in latter evaluative and updating processing stages of infrequent events (reduced NoGo-P3 and infrequent-Go-P3). The null contribution of meanness and boldness domains in these results suggests that N2 and P3 amplitudes in Go/NoGo tasks could be considered as neurobiological indices of the externalizing tendencies comprised in this personality disorder. KW - N2/P3 KW - Inhibitory Control KW - Triarchic Model of Psychopathy Y1 - 2018 SN - 0048-5772 SN - 1469-8986 VL - 55 SP - S91 EP - S91 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Vasishth, Shravan A1 - Mertzen, Daniela A1 - Jäger, Lena Ann A1 - Gelman, Andrew T1 - Corrigendum to: Shravan Vasishth, Daniela Mertzen, Lena A. Jäger, Andrew Gelman; The statistical significance filter leads to overoptimistic expectations of replicability. - Journal of Memory and Language. - 103 (2018), pg. 151 - 175 T2 - Journal of memory and language Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jml.2018.09.004 SN - 0749-596X SN - 1096-0821 VL - 104 SP - 128 EP - 128 PB - Elsevier CY - San Diego ER - TY - GEN A1 - Björk, Jennie A1 - Hölzle, Katharina T1 - Editorial T2 - Creativity and innovation management N2 - "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has. - Margaret Mead." With the last issue of this year we want to point out directions towards what will come and what challenges and opportunities lie ahead of us. More needed than ever are joint creative efforts to find ways to collaborate and innovate in order to secure the wellbeing of our earth for the next generation to come. We have found ourselves puzzled that we could assemble a sustainability issue without having a call for papers or a special issue. In fact, many of the submissions we currently receive, deal with sustainable, ecological or novel approaches to management and organizations. As creativity and innovation are undisputable necessary ingredients for reaching the sustainable development goals, empirical proof and research in this area are still in their infancy. While the role of design and design thinking has been highlighted before for solving wicked societal problems, a lot more research is needed which creative and innovative ways organisations and societies can take to find solutions to climate change, poverty, hunger and education. We would therefore like to call to you, our readers and writers to tackle these problems with your research. The first article in this issue addresses one of the above named challenges - the role of innovation for achieving the transition to a low-carbon energy world. In “Innovating for low-carbon energy through hydropower: Enabling a conservation charity's transition to a low-carbon community”, the authors John Gallagher, Paul Coughlan, A. Prysor Williams and Aonghus McNabola look at how an eco-design approach has supported a community transition to low-carbon. They highlight the importance of effective management as well as external collaboration and how the key for success lay in fostering an open environment for creativity and idea sharing. The second article addresses another of the grand challenges, the future of mobility and uses a design-driven approach to develop scenarios for mobility in cities. In “Designing radical innovations of meanings for society: envisioning new scenarios for smart mobility”, the authors Claudio Dell'Era, Naiara Altuna and Roberto Verganti investigate how new meanings can be designed and proposed to society rather than to individuals in the particular context of smart mobility. Through two case studies the authors argue for a multi-level perspective, taking the perspective of the society to solve societal challenges while considering the needs of the individual. The latter is needed because we will not change if our needs are not addressed. Furthermore, the authors find that both, meaning and technology need to be considered to create radical innovation for society. The role of meaning continues in the third article in this issue. The authors Marta Gasparin and William Green show in their article “Reconstructing meaning without redesigning products: The case of the Serie7 chair” how meaning changes over time even though the product remains the same. Through an in-depth retrospective study of the Serie 7 chair the authors investigate the relationship between meaning and the materiality of the object, and show the importance of materiality in constructing product meaning over long periods. Translating this meaning over the course of the innovation process is an important task of management in order to gain buy-in from all involved stakeholders. In the following article “A systematic approach for new technology development by using a biomimicry-based TRIZ contradiction matrix” the authors Byungun Yoon, Chaeguk Lim, Inchae Park and Dooseob Yoon develop a systematic process combining biomimicry and technology-based TRIZ in order to solve technological problems or develop new technologies based on completely new sources or combinations from technology and biology. In the fifth article in this issue “Innovating via Building Absorptive Capacity: Interactive Effects of Top Management Support of Learning, Employee Learning Orientation, and Decentralization Structure” the authors Li-Yun Sun, Chenwei Li and Yuntao Dong examine the effect of learning-related personal and contextual factors on organizational absorptive capability and subsequent innovative performance. The authors find positive effects as well as a moderation influence of decentralized organizational decision-making structures. In the sixth article “Creativity within boundaries: social identity and the development of new ideas in franchise systems” the authors Fanny Simon, Catherine Allix-Desfautaux, Nabil Khelil and Anne-Laure Le Nadant address the paradox of balancing novelty and conformity for creativity in a franchise system. This research is one of the first we know to explicitly address creativity and innovation in such a rigid and pre-determined system. Using a social identity perspective, they can show that social control, which may be exerted by manipulating group identity, is an efficient lever to increase both the creation and the diffusion of the idea. Furthermore, they show that franchisees who do not conform to the norm of the group are stigmatized and must face pressure from the group to adapt their behaviors. This has important implications for future research. In the following article “Exploring employee interactions and quality of contributions in intra-organisational innovation platforms” the authors Dimitra Chasanidou, Njål Sivertstol and Jarle Hildrum examine the user interactions in an intra-organisational innovation platform, and also address the influence of user interactions for idea development. The authors find that employees communicate through the innovation platform with different interaction, contribution and collaboration types and propose three types of contribution qualities—passive, efficient and balanced contribution. In the eighth article “Ready for Take-off”: How Open Innovation influences startup success” Cristina Marullo, Elena Casprini, Alberto di Minin and Andrea Piccaluga seek to predict new venture success based on factors that can be observed in the pre-startup phase. The authors introduce different variables of founding teams and how these relate to startup success. Building on large-scale dataset of submitted business plans at UC Berkeley, they can show that teams with high skills diversity and past joint experience are a lot better able to prevent the risk of business failure at entry and to adapt the internal resources to market conditions. Furthermore, it is crucial for the team to integrate many external knowledge sources into their process (openness) in order to be successful. The crucial role of knowledge and how it is communicated and shared is the focal point of Natalya Sergeeva's and Anna Trifilova's article on “The role of storytelling in the innovation process”. They authors can show how storytelling has an important role to play when it comes to motivating employees to innovate and promoting innovation success stories inside and outside the organization. The deep human desire to hear and experience stories is also addressed in the last article in this issue “Gamification Approaches to the Early Stage of Innovation” by Rui Patricio, Antonio Moreira and Francesco Zurlo. Using gamification approaches at the early stage of innovation promises to create better team coherence, let employees experience fun and engagement, improve communication and foster knowledge exchange. Using an analytical framework, the authors analyze 15 articles that have looked at gamification in the context of innovation management before. They find that gamification indeed supports firms in becoming better at performing complex innovation tasks and managing innovation challenges. Furthermore, gamification in innovation creates a space for inspiration, improves creativity and the generation of high potential ideas. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/caim.12298 SN - 0963-1690 SN - 1467-8691 VL - 27 IS - 4 SP - 373 EP - 374 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Shaki, Samuel A1 - Fischer, Martin H. T1 - Commentary on: Elizabeth H. Toomarian; Edward M. Hubbard: On the genesis of spatial-numerical associations : evolutionary and cultural factors co-construct the mental number line. - In: Neuroscience & biobehavioral reviews. - 90 (2018), S. 184 - 199 T2 - Neuroscience & biobehavioral reviews : official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2018.10.002 SN - 0149-7634 SN - 1873-7528 VL - 95 SP - 189 EP - 190 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - GEN A1 - Barlow, Axel A1 - Sheng, Gui-Lian A1 - Lai, Xu-Long A1 - Hofreiter, Michael A1 - Paijmans, Johanna L. A. T1 - Once lost, twice found: Combined analysis of ancient giant panda sequences characterises extinct clade T2 - Journal of biogeography Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13486 SN - 0305-0270 SN - 1365-2699 VL - 46 IS - 1 SP - 251 EP - 253 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Jara, Jorge A1 - Sánchez-Reyes, Hugo A1 - Socquet, Anne A1 - Cotton, Fabrice A1 - Virieux, Jean A1 - Maksymowicz, Andrei A1 - Díaz-Mojica, John A1 - Walpersdorf, Andrea A1 - Ruiz, Javier A1 - Cotte, Nathalie A1 - Norabuena, Edmundo T1 - Corrigendum to: Kinematic study of Iquique 2014 Mw 8.1 earthquake: Understanding the segmentation of the seismogenic zone. - (Earth and planetary science letters. - 503 (2018) S. 131 – 143) T2 - Earth and planetary science letters N2 - We study the rupture processes of Iquique earthquake 8.1 (2014/04/01) and its largest aftershock 7.7 (2014/04/03) that ruptured the North Chile subduction zone. High-rate Global Positioning System (GPS) recordings and strong motion data are used to reconstruct the evolution of the slip amplitude, rise time and rupture time of both earthquakes. A two-step inversion scheme is assumed, by first building prior models for both earthquakes from the inversion of the estimated static displacements and then, kinematic inversions in the frequency domain are carried out taken into account this prior information. The preferred model for the mainshock exhibits a seismic moment of 1.73 × 1021 Nm ( 8.1) and maximum slip of ∼9 m, while the aftershock model has a seismic moment of 3.88 × 1020 ( 7.7) and a maximum slip of ∼3 m. For both earthquakes, the final slip distributions show two asperities (a shallow one and a deep one) separated by an area with significant slip deficit. This suggests a segmentation along-dip which might be related to a change of the dipping angle of the subducting slab inferred from gravimetric data. Along-strike, the areas where the seismic ruptures stopped seem to be well correlated with geological features observed from geophysical information (high-resolution bathymetry, gravimetry and coupling maps) that are representative of the long-term segmentation of the subduction margin. Considering the spatially limited portions that were broken by these two earthquakes, our results support the idea that the seismic gap is not filled yet. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2018.11.026 SN - 0012-821X SN - 1385-013X VL - 506 SP - 347 EP - 347 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - GEN T1 - Jüdischer Kalender für das Jahr 5779 (תשע״ט) BT - September 2018 - September 2019 N2 - Der Jüdische Kalender für das Jahr 5779 des Judaica-Portal Berlin-Brandenburg stellt jede der beteiligten Bibliothek auf einem Kalenderblatt vor. Auf der Vorderseite befindet sich jeweils ein doppeltes Kalendarium: Die Kalenderblätter folgen dem christlichen Jahr, parallel dazu sind die entsprechenden jüdischen Monatsangaben angegeben. Jüdische Feiertage werden durch hervorgehobene Zahlen im Kalendarium angezeigt. Auf der Rückseite finden sich diese Feiertage aufgelistet, ebenso wie die jüdischen Monatsnamen in lateinischer Schrift. Zudem befindet sich auf der Vorderseite jeweils ein repräsentatives Bild der Bibliothek, mit dem daneben befindlichen QR-Code gelangt man direkt zum jeweiligen Bucheintrag im Judiaca-Portal. Auf der Rückseite gibt es eine kurze Bildbeschreibung zum abgedruckten Bild. Zusätzlich stellt sich auf der Rückseite jede Bibliothek vor. Hier findet man die wichtigsten Informationen und Kontaktdaten. Das Judaica-Portal Berlin-Brandenburg ist ein Gemeinschaftsprojekt des Selma Stern Zentrums für Jüdische Studien Berlin-Brandenburg in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Kooperativen Bibliotheksverbund Berlin-Brandenburg (KOBV). Sie stellen sich gemeinsam auf einem Kalenderblatt vor. Daneben finden Sie Kalenderblätter folgender Bibliotheken: • UB der Universität Potsdam • UB der Freien Universität Berlin • UB der Humboldt-Universität Berlin • UB der Europa-Universität Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder) • Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin – Preußischer Kulturbesitz • Bibliothek des Zentrum für Antisemitismusforschung der Technischen Universität Berlin • Bibliothek des Abraham Geiger Kollegs • Bibliothek des Moses Mendelssohn Zentrums für europäisch-jüdische Studien • Bibliothek des Jüdischen Museums Berlin • Bibliothek der Jüdischen Gemeinde zu Berlin • Bibliothek Institut Kirche und Judentum • UB Johann Christian Senckenberg Frankfurt am Main • Israelische Nationalbibliothek Jerusalem (RAMBI) KW - Judaica KW - Hebraica KW - Katalog KW - Discovery System KW - Artikelindex Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-415642 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER -