@article{KampeHornConradScholzetal.2023, author = {Kampe, Heike and Horn-Conrad, Antje and Scholz, Jana and Zimmermann, Matthias and Mikulla, Stefanie and Agrofylax, Luisa and Westphal, Luise and Himmler, Lena and Aust, Sarah-Madeleine and Engel, Silke}, title = {Portal = Zukunft}, number = {1}, issn = {1618-6893}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-61142}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-611429}, pages = {58}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Haben Sie auch manchmal das Gef{\"u}hl, dass die Zeit schneller verrinnt als fr{\"u}her? Die Tage, Wochen und Monate kommen und gehen scheinbar wie im Flug, und schon beginnt ein neues Jahr, das bereits nach einem Wimpernschlag gar nicht mehr jung ist. Vielleicht hat sich unser Zeitempfinden ver{\"a}ndert, denn manchmal wirkt es, als w{\"u}rden sich die Ereignisse {\"u}berschlagen. Und dabei denke ich nicht nur an die krisenhaften Ver{\"a}nderungen auf der Welt, die auf uns einprasseln und sich sogar {\"u}berlagern. Auch unser Alltag nimmt Fahrt auf, denn wir suchen nach st{\"a}ndig neuen Erlebnissen und verarbeiten t{\"a}glich mehr und mehr Informationen. Die Technologien um uns herum ver{\"a}ndern sich rasant, Wissen scheint exponentiell zu wachsen und in immer k{\"u}rzerer Zeit bewirken wir immer mehr auf diesem Planeten und um ihn herum. In diesem Zeitgef{\"u}hl stehen wir mit einem Bein schon im Morgen: Wir sind auf das Kommende gerichtet und setzen im Hier und Jetzt alles daran, unsere Zukunft zu gestalten. Diesem vorw{\"a}rts gewandten Lebensgef{\"u}hl m{\"o}chten wir die aktuelle Ausgabe des Universit{\"a}tsmagazins widmen und haben uns mal umgeh{\"o}rt, was da auf uns zukommt. Auch an dieser Hochschule - so schildern Studierende, Forschende und Besch{\"a}ftigte ihre Utopien der Universit{\"a}t der Zukunft. Und weil das nicht ohne die Vergangenheit geht, haben wir f{\"u}r Sie eine fotografische Zeitreise in die Geschichte der Hochschule gemacht, als heute noch morgen war. Lesen Sie, warum Literatur der Ort f{\"u}r Visionen des Kommenden und die digitale Literaturwissenschaft von morgen heute schon Realit{\"a}t ist. Erfahren Sie, wie wir k{\"u}nftig Musik h{\"o}ren werden, wie der Chemieunterricht von Morgen aussehen und der Klimawandel afrikanische Landschaften ver{\"a}ndern wird. Haben Sie sich schon gefragt, was in zehn Jahren wohl aus ihrem Job geworden ist? Wir informieren Sie {\"u}ber Arbeit 4.0 und was das Homeoffice bereits jetzt mit unseren Verhandlungskompetenzen macht. Dass ich mit den Gedanken eigentlich schon beim n{\"a}chsten großen Event bin, m{\"o}chte ich Ihnen auch nicht vorenthalten. Denn am 6. Mai 2023 findet der Potsdamer Tag der Wissenschaften statt, und zwar auf dem Campus Griebnitzsee. Wir freuen uns, Sie dort zu sehen! Und nun w{\"u}nsche ich Ihnen viel Spaß beim Lesen.}, language = {de} } @misc{ZimmermannTjadenKampeetal.2024, author = {Zimmermann, Matthias and Tjaden, Jasper and Kampe, Heike and Scholz, Jana and Aust, Sarah-Madeleine and Himmler, Lena and Agrofylax, Luisa and Mey, J{\"u}rgen and Agarwal, Ankit and Nikoloski, Zoran and Mikulla, Stefanie and Horn-Conrad, Antje and Evans, Myfanwy}, title = {Portal Wissen = Education:Digital}, series = {Portal Wissen: The research magazine of the University of Potsdam}, journal = {Portal Wissen: The research magazine of the University of Potsdam}, number = {1/2024}, issn = {2198-9974}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-64697}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-646977}, pages = {58}, year = {2024}, abstract = {Have you already swiped or liked this morning? Have you taken part in a video conference at work, used or programmed a database? Have you paid with your smartphone on the way home, listened to a podcast, or extended the lending of books you borrowed from the library? And in the evening, have you filled out your tax return application on ELSTER.de on your tablet, shopped online, or paid invoices before you were tempted to watch a series on a streaming platform? Our lives are entirely digitalized. These changes make many things faster, easier, and more efficient. But keeping pace with these changes demands a lot from us, and not everyone succeeds. There are people who prefer to go to the bank to make a transfer, leave the programming to the experts, send their tax return by mail, and only use their smartphone to make phone calls. They don't want to keep pace, or maybe they can't. They haven't learned these things. Others, younger people, grow up as "digital natives" surrounded by digital devices, tools, and processes. But does that mean they really know how to use them? Or do they also need digital education? But what does successful digital education actually look like? Does it teach us how to use a tablet, how to google properly, and how to write Excel spreadsheets? Perhaps it's about more than that. It's about understanding the comprehensive change that has been taking hold of our world since it was broken down into digital ones and zeros and rebuilt virtually. But how do we learn to live in a world of digitality - with all that it entails, and to our benefit? For the new issue of "Portal Wissen", we looked around at the university and interviewed researchers about the role that the connection between digitalization and learning plays in the research of various disciplines. We spoke to Katharina Scheiter, Professor of Digital Education, about the future of German schools and had several experts show us examples of how digital tools can improve learning in schools. We also talked to computer science and agricultural researchers about how even experienced farmers can still learn a lot about their land and their work thanks to digital tools. We spoke to educational researchers who are using big data to analyze how boys and girls learn and what the possible causes for differences are. Education and political scientist Nina Kolleck, on the other hand, looks at education against the backdrop of globalization and relies on the analysis of large amounts of social media data. Of course, we don't lose sight of the diversity of research at the University of Potsdam. We learn, for example, what alternatives to antibiotics could soon be available. This magazine also looks at stress and how it makes us ill as well as the research into sustainable ore extraction. A new feature of our magazine is a whole series of shorter articles that invite you to browse and read: from research news and photographic insights into laboratories to simple explanations of complex phenomena and outlooks into the wider world of research to a small scientific utopia and a personal thanks to research. All this in the name of education, of course. Enjoy your read!}, language = {en} } @article{ZimmermannScholzAgrofylaxetal.2023, author = {Zimmermann, Matthias and Scholz, Jana and Agrofylax, Luisa and Engel, Silke and Kampe, Heike and Mikulla, Stefanie}, title = {Portal Wissen = Learning}, series = {Portal Wissen: The research magazine of the University of Potsdam}, journal = {Portal Wissen: The research magazine of the University of Potsdam}, number = {01/2023}, issn = {2198-9974}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-61146}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-611464}, pages = {58}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Changing through learning is one of the most important characteristics we humans have. We are born and can - it seems - do nothing. We have to comprehend, copy, and acquire everything: grasping and walking, eating and speaking. Of course, we also have to read and do number work. In the meantime, we know: We will never be able to finish this. At best, we learn for a lifetime. If we stop, it harms us. The Greek philosopher Plato said more than 2,400 years ago, "There is no shame in not knowing something. The shame is in not being willing to learn." As humans we are also capable of learning; thanks to more and more knowledge about the world around us, we have moved from the Stone Age into the digital age. That this development is not a finish line either, but that we still have a long way to go, is shown by man-made climate change - and above all by our inability as a global community to translate what research teaches us into appropriate actions. Let us dare to hope that we also comprehend this. What we tend to ignore in the intensive discussion about the multi-layered levels of learning: We are by no means the only learners. Many, if not all, living beings on our planet learn, some more in a more purposeful and complex and more cognitive way than others. And for some time now, machines have also been able to learn more or less independently. Artificial intelligence sends its regards. The significance of learning for human beings can hardly be overestimated. Science has also understood this and has discovered the learning processes and conditions in almost all contexts for itself, no matter whether it is about our own learning processes and conditions or those around us. We have investigated some of these for the current issue of "Portal Wissen". Psycholinguist Natalie Boll-Avetisyan has developed a box that can be used to detect language learning disorders already in young children. The behavioral biologists Jana Eccard and Valeria Mazza investigated the behavior of small rodents and found out that they do not only develop different personality traits but they also described how they learn to adapt them different environmental conditions. Computer linguist David Schlangen examines the question what machines have to learn so that our communication with them works even better. Since research is ultimately always a learning process that strives to understand something yet unknown, this time all texts are somehow along the motto of the title theme: It is about what the history of past centuries reveals about "military cultures of violence" and the question of what lessons we should learn from natural hazards for the future. We talked with a legal scholar who looks beyond the university's backyard and wants to make law comprehensible to everyone. We also talked with a philosopher who analyzes why "having an opinion" means something different today than 100 years ago. We report about an AI-based genome analysis that can change healthcare sustainably. Furthermore, it is about the job profile "YouTuber", minor cosmopolitanisms, and wildlife management in Africa. When you have finished reading, you will have learnt something. Promised! Enjoy your read!}, language = {en} } @article{GuentherSchueleZurelletal.2023, author = {G{\"u}nther, Oliver and Sch{\"u}le, Manja and Zurell, Damaris and Jeltsch, Florian and Roeleke, Manuel and Kampe, Heike and Zimmermann, Matthias and Scholz, Jana and Mikulla, Stefanie and Engbert, Ralf and Elsner, Birgit and Schlangen, David and Agrofylax, Luisa and Georgi, Doreen and Weymar, Mathias and Wagener, Thorsten and Bookhagen, Bodo and Eibl, Eva P. S. and Korup, Oliver and Oswald, Sascha and Thieken, Annegret and van der Beek, Pieter A.}, title = {Portal Wissen = Excellence}, series = {Portal Wissen: The research magazine of the University of Potsdam}, journal = {Portal Wissen: The research magazine of the University of Potsdam}, number = {02/2023}, issn = {2198-9974}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-61145}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-611456}, pages = {58}, year = {2023}, abstract = {When something is not just good or very good, we often call it excellent. But what does that really mean? Coming from the Latin word "excellere," it describes things, persons, or actions that are outstanding or superior and distinguish themselves from others. It cannot get any better. Excellence is the top choice for being the first or the best. Research is no exception. At the university, you will find numerous exceptional researchers, outstanding projects, and, time and again, sensational findings, publications, and results. But is the University of Potsdam also excellent? A question that will certainly create a different stir in 2023 than it did perhaps 20 years ago. Since the launch of the Excellence Initiative in 2005, universities that succeed in winning the most comprehensive funding program for research in Germany have been considered - literally - excellent. Whether in the form of graduate schools, research clusters, or - since the program was continued in 2019 under the title "Excellence Strategy" - entire universities of excellence: Anyone who wants to be among the best research universities needs the seal of excellence. The University of Potsdam is applying for funding with three cluster proposals in the recently launched new round of the "Excellence Strategy of the German Federal and State Governments." One proposal comes from ecology and biodiversity research. The aim is to paint a comprehensive picture of ecological processes by examining the role of single individuals as well as the interactions among many species in an ecosystem to precisely determine the function of biodiversity. A second proposal has been submitted by the cognitive sciences. Here, the complex coexistence of language and cognition, development and learning, as well as motivation and behavior will be researched as a dynamic interrelation. The projects will include cooperation with the educational sciences to constantly consider linked learning and educational processes. The third proposal from the geo and environmental sciences concentrates on extreme and particularly devastating natural hazards and processes such as floods and droughts. The researchers examine these extreme events, focusing on their interaction with society, to be able to better assess the risks and damages they might involve and to initiate timely measures in the future. "All three proposals highlight the excellence of our performance," emphasizes University President Prof. Oliver G{\"u}nther, Ph.D. "The outlines impressively document our commitment, existing research excellence, and the potential of the University of Potsdam as a whole. The fact that three powerful consortia have come together in different subject areas shows that we have taken a good step forward on our way to becoming one of the top German universities." In this issue, we are looking at what is in and behind these proposals: We talked to the researchers who wrote them. We asked them about their plans in case their proposals are successful and they bring a cluster of excellence to the university. But we also looked at the research that has led to the proposals, has long shaped the university's profile, and earned it national and international recognition. We present a small selection of projects, methods, and researchers to illustrate why there really is excellent research in these proposals! By the way, "excellence" is also not the end of the flagpole. After all, the adjective "excellent" even has a comparative and a superlative. With this in mind, I wish you the most excellent pleasure reading this issue!}, language = {en} }