TY - GEN A1 - Esguerra, Alejandro T1 - "A Comment That Might Help Us to Move Along" BT - Brokers in Negotiation Systems T2 - Sustainability Politics and Limited Statehood : Contesting the New Modes of Governance N2 - This chapter investigates the trajectory of establishing the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) in the early 1990s as the first private transnational certification organization with an antagonistic stakeholder body. Its main contribution is a micro-analysis of the founding assembly in 1993. By investigating the role of brokers within the negotiation as one institutional scope condition for ‘arguing’ having occurred, the chapter adopts a dramaturgical approach. It contends that the authority of brokers is not necessarily institutionally given, but needs to be gained: brokers have to prove situationally that their knowledge is relevant and that they are speaking impartially in the interest of progress rather than their own. The chapter stresses the importance of procedural knowledge which brokers provide in contrast to policy knowledge. Y1 - 2016 SN - 978-3-319-39871-6 SN - 978-3-319-39870-9 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39871-6_2 SP - 25 EP - 46 PB - Cham CY - Basingstoke ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kubatova, Brankica A1 - Hamann, Wolf-Rainer A1 - Kubat, Jiri A1 - Oskinova, Lida T1 - 3D Monte Carlo Radiative Transfer in Inhomogeneous Massive Star Winds BT - Application to Resonance Line Formation T2 - Radiative signatures from the cosmos N2 - Already for decades it has been known that the winds of massive stars are inhomogeneous (i.e. clumped). To properly model observed spectra of massive star winds it is necessary to incorporate the 3-D nature of clumping into radiative transfer calculations. In this paper we present our full 3-D Monte Carlo radiative transfer code for inhomogeneous expanding stellar winds. We use a set of parameters to describe dense as well as the rarefied wind components. At the same time, we account for non-monotonic velocity fields. We show how the 3-D density and velocity wind inhomogeneities strongly affect the resonance line formation. We also show how wind clumping can solve the discrepancy between P v and H alpha mass-loss rate diagnostics. Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-58381-925-8 SN - 1050-3390 VL - 519 SP - 209 EP - 212 PB - Astronomical soc pacific CY - San Fransisco ER - TY - GEN A1 - Brechun, Katherine E. A1 - Woolley, Andrew A1 - Arndt, Katja Maren T1 - A Bacterial Bandpass Assay for Protein-Protein Interactions T2 - Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society Y1 - 2017 SN - 0961-8368 SN - 1469-896X VL - 26 SP - 198 EP - 198 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken 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 - Galke, Lukas A1 - Gerstenkorn, Gunnar A1 - Scherp, Ansgar T1 - A case atudy of closed-domain response suggestion with limited training data T2 - Database and Expert Systems Applications : DEXA 2018 Iinternational workshops N2 - We analyze the problem of response suggestion in a closed domain along a real-world scenario of a digital library. We present a text-processing pipeline to generate question-answer pairs from chat transcripts. On this limited amount of training data, we compare retrieval-based, conditioned-generation, and dedicated representation learning approaches for response suggestion. Our results show that retrieval-based methods that strive to find similar, known contexts are preferable over parametric approaches from the conditioned-generation family, when the training data is limited. We, however, identify a specific representation learning approach that is competitive to the retrieval-based approaches despite the training data limitation. Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-3-319-99133-7 SN - 978-3-319-99132-0 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-99133-7_18 SN - 1865-0929 SN - 1865-0937 VL - 903 SP - 218 EP - 229 PB - Springer CY - Berlin ER - TY - GEN A1 - Halfpap, Stefan A1 - Schlosser, Rainer T1 - A Comparison of Allocation Algorithms for Partially Replicated Databases T2 - 2019 IEEE 35th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE) N2 - Increasing demand for analytical processing capabilities can be managed by replication approaches. However, to evenly balance the replicas' workload shares while at the same time minimizing the data replication factor is a highly challenging allocation problem. As optimal solutions are only applicable for small problem instances, effective heuristics are indispensable. In this paper, we test and compare state-of-the-art allocation algorithms for partial replication. By visualizing and exploring their (heuristic) solutions for different benchmark workloads, we are able to derive structural insights and to detect an algorithm's strengths as well as its potential for improvement. Further, our application enables end-to-end evaluations of different allocations to verify their theoretical performance. Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-5386-7474-1 SN - 978-1-5386-7475-8 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/ICDE.2019.00226 SN - 1084-4627 SN - 2375-026X SN - 1063-6382 SP - 2008 EP - 2011 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kramer, Markus A1 - Kleinpeter, Erich T1 - A conformational study of N-acetyl glucosamine derivatives utilizing residual dipolar couplings (vol 212, pg 174, 2011) T2 - Journal of magnetic resonance Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2011.09.017 SN - 1090-7807 VL - 213 IS - 1 SP - 210 EP - 211 PB - Elsevier CY - San Diego ER - TY - GEN A1 - Torkura, Kennedy A. A1 - Sukmana, Muhammad Ihsan Haikal A1 - Kayem, Anne V. D. M. A1 - Cheng, Feng A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - A cyber risk based moving target defense mechanism for microservice architectures T2 - IEEE Intl Conf on Parallel & Distributed Processing with Applications, Ubiquitous Computing & Communications, Big Data & Cloud Computing, Social Computing & Networking, Sustainable Computing & Communications (ISPA/IUCC/BDCloud/SocialCom/SustainCom) N2 - Microservice Architectures (MSA) structure applications as a collection of loosely coupled services that implement business capabilities. The key advantages of MSA include inherent support for continuous deployment of large complex applications, agility and enhanced productivity. However, studies indicate that most MSA are homogeneous, and introduce shared vulnerabilites, thus vulnerable to multi-step attacks, which are economics-of-scale incentives to attackers. In this paper, we address the issue of shared vulnerabilities in microservices with a novel solution based on the concept of Moving Target Defenses (MTD). Our mechanism works by performing risk analysis against microservices to detect and prioritize vulnerabilities. Thereafter, security risk-oriented software diversification is employed, guided by a defined diversification index. The diversification is performed at runtime, leveraging both model and template based automatic code generation techniques to automatically transform programming languages and container images of the microservices. Consequently, the microservices attack surfaces are altered thereby introducing uncertainty for attackers while reducing the attackability of the microservices. Our experiments demonstrate the efficiency of our solution, with an average success rate of over 70% attack surface randomization. KW - Security Risk Assessment KW - Security Metrics KW - Moving Target Defense KW - Microservices Security KW - Application Container Security Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-7281-1141-4 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/BDCloud.2018.00137 SN - 2158-9178 SP - 932 EP - 939 PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers CY - Los Alamitos ER - TY - GEN A1 - Myachykov, Andriy A1 - Fischer, Martin H. T1 - A hierarchical view of abstractness BT - Grounded, embodied, and situated aspect: Comment on "Words as social tools: Language, sociality and inner grounding in abstract concepts" by Anna M. Borghi et al. T2 - Physics of life reviews Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plrev.2019.04.005 SN - 1571-0645 SN - 1873-1457 VL - 29 SP - 161 EP - 163 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - GEN A1 - Gonzalez-Lopez, Fernanda A1 - Pufahl, Luise T1 - A Landscape for Case Models T2 - Enterprise, Business-Process and Information Systems Modeling N2 - Case Management is a paradigm to support knowledge-intensive processes. The different approaches developed for modeling these types of processes tend to result in scattered models due to the low abstraction level at which the inherently complex processes are therein represented. Thus, readability and understandability is more challenging than that of traditional process models. By reviewing existing proposals in the field of process overviews and case models, this paper extends a case modeling language - the fragment-based Case Management (fCM) language - with the goal of modeling knowledge-intensive processes from a higher abstraction level - to generate a so-called fCM landscape. This proposal is empirically evaluated via an online experiment. Results indicate that interpreting an fCM landscape might be more effective and efficient than interpreting an informationally equivalent case model. KW - Case Management KW - Process landscape KW - Process map KW - Process architecture KW - Process model Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-3-030-20618-5 SN - 978-3-030-20617-8 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-20618-5_6 SN - 1865-1348 VL - 352 SP - 87 EP - 102 PB - Springer CY - Berlin ER - TY - GEN A1 - Puschmann, Anne-Katrin A1 - Wippert, Pia-Maria T1 - A LONGITUDINAL INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO STRESS AND ITS IMPACT ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF CHRONIC PAIN T2 - Psychosomatic medicine Y1 - 2016 SN - 0033-3174 SN - 1534-7796 VL - 78 SP - A91 EP - A91 PB - Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group CY - Philadelphia 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 - Clusella, Pau A1 - Politi, Antonio A1 - Rosenblum, Michael T1 - A minimal model of self-consistent partial synchrony (vol 18, 093037, 2016) T2 - New journal of physics : the open-access journal for physics Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/aa722b SN - 1367-2630 VL - 19 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - GEN A1 - Awasthi, Swapnil A1 - Kaminski, Jakob A1 - Rapp, Michael Armin A1 - Schlagenhauf, Florian A1 - Walter, Henrik A1 - Ruggeri, Barbara A1 - Ripke, Stephan A1 - Schumann, Gunter A1 - Heinz, Andreas T1 - A neural signature of malleability BT - general intelligence correlates with ventral striatal activation and epigenetic makers of dopamine neurotransmission T2 - European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology N2 - General intelligence has a substantial genetic background in children, adolescents, and adults, but environmental factors also strongly correlate with cognitive performance as evidenced by a strong (up to one SD) increase in average intelligence test results in the second half of the previous century. This change occurred in a period apparently too short to accommodate radical genetic changes. It is highly suggestive that environmental factors interact with genotype by possible modification of epigenetic factors that regulate gene expression and thus contribute to individual malleability. This modification might as well be reflected in recent observations of an association between dopamine-dependent encoding of reward prediction errors and cognitive capacity, which was modulated by adverse life events. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroneuro.2017.08.139 SN - 0924-977X SN - 1873-7862 VL - 29 SP - S858 EP - S859 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kocyan, Alexander A1 - Wiland-Szymanska, Justyna T1 - A new name and a new combination for Friedmannia nom. illeg. (Hypoxidaceae) T2 - Phytotaxa : a rapid international journal for accelerating the publication of botanical taxonomy N2 - Recently, Kocyan & Wiland-Szymańska (2016) have published a thorough research article on one of the outstanding members of the family Hypoxidaceae on the Seychelles, which resulted in the raise of a new genus (Friedmannia Kocyan & Wiland-Szymańska 2016: 60) to accommodate the former Curculigo seychellensis Bojer ex Baker (1877: 368). However, it has turned out that the name Friedmannia Chantanachat & Bold (1962: 45) already exists in literature for a green alga, which renders the new hypoxid genus illegitimate (Melbourne Code; McNeill et al. 2012). Therefore, we assign a new generic epithet to Curculigo seychellensis. Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.291.3.10 SN - 1179-3155 SN - 1179-3163 VL - 291 IS - 3 SP - 239 EP - 239 PB - Magnolia Press CY - Auckland 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 - 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 - Richly, Keven T1 - A survey on trajectory data management for hybrid transactional and analytical workloads T2 - IEEE International Conference on Big Data (Big Data) N2 - Rapid advances in location-acquisition technologies have led to large amounts of trajectory data. This data is the foundation for a broad spectrum of services driven and improved by trajectory data mining. However, for hybrid transactional and analytical workloads, the storing and processing of rapidly accumulated trajectory data is a non-trivial task. In this paper, we present a detailed survey about state-of-the-art trajectory data management systems. To determine the relevant aspects and requirements for such systems, we developed a trajectory data mining framework, which summarizes the different steps in the trajectory data mining process. Based on the derived requirements, we analyze different concepts to store, compress, index, and process spatio-temporal data. There are various trajectory management systems, which are optimized for scalability, data footprint reduction, elasticity, or query performance. To get a comprehensive overview, we describe and compare different exciting systems. Additionally, the observed similarities in the general structure of different systems are consolidated in a general blueprint of trajectory management systems. KW - Trajectory Data Management KW - Spatio-Temporal Data KW - Survey Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-5386-5035-6 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/BigData.2018.8622394 SN - 2639-1589 SP - 562 EP - 569 PB - IEEE CY - New York 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 - Perscheid, Cindy A1 - Faber, Lukas A1 - Kraus, Milena A1 - Arndt, Paul A1 - Janke, Michael A1 - Rehfeldt, Sebastian A1 - Schubotz, Antje A1 - Slosarek, Tamara A1 - Uflacker, Matthias T1 - A tissue-aware gene selection approach for analyzing multi-tissue gene expression data T2 - 2018 IEEE International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedicine (BIBM) N2 - High-throughput RNA sequencing (RNAseq) produces large data sets containing expression levels of thousands of genes. The analysis of RNAseq data leads to a better understanding of gene functions and interactions, which eventually helps to study diseases like cancer and develop effective treatments. Large-scale RNAseq expression studies on cancer comprise samples from multiple cancer types and aim to identify their distinct molecular characteristics. Analyzing samples from different cancer types implies analyzing samples from different tissue origin. Such multi-tissue RNAseq data sets require a meaningful analysis that accounts for the inherent tissue-related bias: The identified characteristics must not originate from the differences in tissue types, but from the actual differences in cancer types. However, current analysis procedures do not incorporate that aspect. As a result, we propose to integrate a tissue-awareness into the analysis of multi-tissue RNAseq data. We introduce an extension for gene selection that provides a tissue-wise context for every gene and can be flexibly combined with any existing gene selection approach. We suggest to expand conventional evaluation by additional metrics that are sensitive to the tissue-related bias. Evaluations show that especially low complexity gene selection approaches profit from introducing tissue-awareness. KW - RNAseq KW - gene selection KW - tissue-awareness KW - TCGA KW - GTEx Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-5488-0 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/BIBM.2018.8621189 SN - 2156-1125 SN - 2156-1133 SP - 2159 EP - 2166 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Alibabaie, Najmeh A1 - Ghasemzadeh, Mohammad A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - A variant of genetic algorithm for non-homogeneous population T2 - International Conference Applied Mathematics, Computational Science and Systems Engineering 2016 N2 - Selection of initial points, the number of clusters and finding proper clusters centers are still the main challenge in clustering processes. In this paper, we suggest genetic algorithm based method which searches several solution spaces simultaneously. The solution spaces are population groups consisting of elements with similar structure. Elements in a group have the same size, while elements in different groups are of different sizes. The proposed algorithm processes the population in groups of chromosomes with one gene, two genes to k genes. These genes hold corresponding information about the cluster centers. In the proposed method, the crossover and mutation operators can accept parents with different sizes; this can lead to versatility in population and information transfer among sub-populations. We implemented the proposed method and evaluated its performance against some random datasets and the Ruspini dataset as well. The experimental results show that the proposed method could effectively determine the appropriate number of clusters and recognize their centers. Overall this research implies that using heterogeneous population in the genetic algorithm can lead to better results. Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/itmconf/20170902001 SN - 2271-2097 VL - 9 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - GEN A1 - Levermann, Anders A1 - Petoukhov, Vladimir A1 - Schewe, Jacob A1 - Schellnhuber, Hans Joachim T1 - Abrupt monsoon transitions as seen in paleorecords can be explained by moisture-advection feedback T2 - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1603130113 SN - 0027-8424 VL - 113 SP - E2348 EP - E2349 PB - National Acad. of Sciences CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Knigge, Xenia A1 - Wenger, C. A1 - Bier, Frank Fabian A1 - Hölzel, Ralph T1 - AC electrokinetic immobilisation of nanoobjects as individual singles in regular arrays T2 - European biophysics journal : with biophysics letters ; an international journal of biophysics Y1 - 2017 SN - 0175-7571 SN - 1432-1017 VL - 46 SP - S187 EP - S187 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Laux, Eva-Maria A1 - Knigge, Xenia A1 - Wenger, C. A1 - Bier, Frank Fabian A1 - Hölzel, Ralph T1 - AC electrokinetic manipulation of nanoparticles and molecules T2 - European biophysics journal : with biophysics letters ; an international journal of biophysics Y1 - 2017 SN - 0175-7571 SN - 1432-1017 VL - 46 SP - S189 EP - S189 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Poppenhagen, Nicole A1 - Temmen, Jens T1 - Across currents: Connections between Atlantic and (Trans) Pacific studies T2 - Atlantic studies : literary, cultural and historical perspectives KW - Transpacific studies KW - Pacific studies KW - Atlantic studies KW - transoceanic studies KW - archipelagic studies KW - Asian American studies KW - indigenous studies KW - oceanic discourse KW - Black Pacific Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/14788810.2017.1394131 SN - 1478-8810 SN - 1740-4649 VL - 15 IS - 2 SP - 149 EP - 159 PB - Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group CY - Abingdon ER - TY - GEN A1 - Lin, Chiao-I A1 - Khajooei, Mina A1 - Nair, Alexandra A1 - Heikkila, Mika A1 - Kaplick, Hannes A1 - Tilman, Engel A1 - Mayer, Frank T1 - Activities of hip muscles in response to perturbed walking in individual with chronic ankle instability T2 - Medicine and science in sports and exercise : MSSE N2 - Chronic ankle instability (CAI) is not only an ankle issue, but also affects sensorimotor system. People with CAI show altered muscle activation in proximal joints such as hip and knee. However, evidence is limited as controversial results have been presented regarding changes in activation of hip muscles in CAI population. PURPOSE: To investigate the effect of CAI on activity of hip muscles during normal walking and walking with perturbations. METHODS: 8 subjects with CAI (23 ± 2 years, 171 ± 7 cm and 65 ± 4 kg) and 8 controls (CON) matched by age, height, weight and dominant leg (25 ± 3 years, 172 ± 7 cm and 65 ± 6 kg) walked shoed on a split-belt treadmill (1 m/s). Subjects performed 5 minutes of baseline walking and 6 minutes walking with 10 perturbations (at 200 ms after heel contact with 42 m/s2 deceleration impulse) on each side. Electromyography signals from gluteus medius (Gmed) and gluteus maximus (Gmax) were recorded while walking. Muscle amplitudes (Root Mean Square normalized to maximum voluntary isometric contraction) were calculated at 200 ms before heel contact (Pre200), 100 ms after heel contact (Post100) during normal walking and 200 ms after perturbations (Pert200). Differences between groups were examined using Mann Whitney U test and Bonferroni correction to account for multiple testing (adjust α level p≤ 0.0125). RESULT: In Gmed, CAI group showed lower muscle amplitude than CON group after heel contact (Post100: 18±7 % and 47±21 %, p< .01) and after walking perturbations ( 31±13 % and 62±26 %, p< .01), but not before heel contact (Pre200: 5±2 % and 11±10 %, p= 0.195). In Gmax, no difference was found between CAI and CON groups in all three time points (Pre200: 12±5 % and 17±12 %, p= 0.574; Post100: 41±21 % and 41±13 %, p= 1.00; Pert200: 79±46 % and 62±35 %, p= 0.505). CONCLUSION: People with CAI activated Gmed less than healthy control in feedback mechanism (after heel contact and walking with perturbations), but not in feedforward mechanism (before heel contact). Less activation on Gmed may affect the balance in frontal plane and increase the risk of recurrent ankle sprain, giving way or feeling ankle instability in patients with CAI during walking. Future studies should investigate the effect of Gmed strengthening or neuromuscular training on CAI rehabilitation. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1249/01.mss.0000671060.98581.0b SN - 0195-9131 SN - 1530-0315 VL - 52 IS - 17 SP - 94 EP - 94 PB - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hesse, Günter A1 - Matthies, Christoph A1 - Sinzig, Werner A1 - Uflacker, Matthias T1 - Adding Value by Combining Business and Sensor Data BT - an Industry 4.0 Use Case T2 - Database Systems for Advanced Applications N2 - Industry 4.0 and the Internet of Things are recent developments that have lead to the creation of new kinds of manufacturing data. Linking this new kind of sensor data to traditional business information is crucial for enterprises to take advantage of the data’s full potential. In this paper, we present a demo which allows experiencing this data integration, both vertically between technical and business contexts and horizontally along the value chain. The tool simulates a manufacturing company, continuously producing both business and sensor data, and supports issuing ad-hoc queries that answer specific questions related to the business. In order to adapt to different environments, users can configure sensor characteristics to their needs. KW - Industry 4.0 KW - Internet of Things KW - Data integration Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-3-030-18590-9 SN - 978-3-030-18589-3 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-18590-9_80 SN - 0302-9743 SN - 1611-3349 VL - 11448 SP - 528 EP - 532 PB - Springer CY - Cham ER - TY - GEN A1 - Koziel, Slawomir A1 - Hermanussen, Michael A1 - Gomula, Alexandra A1 - Swanson, James A1 - Kaczmarek, Maria A1 - El-Shabrawi, Mortada A1 - Elhusseini, Mona A1 - Satake, Takashi A1 - Martinovic Klaric, Irena A1 - Scheffler, Christiane A1 - Morkuniene, Ruta A1 - Godina, Elena A1 - Sasa, Missoni A1 - Tutkuviene, Janina A1 - Siniarska, Anna A1 - Nieczuja-Dwojacka, Joanna A1 - Nunez, Javier A1 - Groth, Detlef A1 - Barbieri, Davide T1 - Adolescence - a Transition to Adulthood Proceedings of the 24th Aschauer Soiree, held at Jurata, Poland, November 5th 2016 T2 - Pediatric Endocrinology Reviews N2 - Eighteen scientists met at Jurata, Poland, to discuss various aspects of the transition from adolescence to adulthood. This transition is a delicate period facing complex interactions between the adolescents and the social group they belong to. Social identity, group identification and identity signalling, but also stress affecting basal salivary cortisol rhythms, hypertension, inappropriate nutrition causing latent and manifest obesity, moreover, in developing and under-developed countries, parasitosis causing anaemia thereby impairing growth and development, are issues to be dealt with during this period of the human development. In addition, some new aspects of the association between weight, height and head circumference in the newborns were discussed, as well as intrauterine head growth and head circumference as health risk indicators. KW - Strategic growth adjustment KW - BMI KW - Growth faltering KW - Secular trend KW - Obesity KW - Growth modelling Y1 - 2017 SN - 1565-4753 VL - 14 IS - 3 SP - 326 EP - 334 PB - Medical Media CY - Netanya ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bürger, Andreas A1 - Magdans, Uta A1 - Gies, Hermann T1 - Adsorption of amino acids on the magnetite-(111)-surface: a force field study (vol 19, 851, 2013) T2 - Journal of molecular modeling Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00894-016-3124-8 SN - 1610-2940 SN - 0948-5023 VL - 22 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Ehmer, Oliver A1 - Barth-Weingarten, Dagmar T1 - Adverbial patterns in interaction T2 - Language sciences Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.langsci.2016.05.001 SN - 0388-0001 SN - 1873-5746 VL - 58 SP - 1 EP - 7 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - GEN A1 - Schenck, Marcia C. T1 - Africa’s forgotten refugee convention Africa is a Country T2 - Histories of Refuge - Geschichten der Zuflucht Y1 - 2020 UR - https://africasacountry.com/2020/11/africas-forgotten-refugee-convention PB - Forum Transregionale Studien eV CY - Berlin ER - TY - GEN A1 - Matthies, Christoph T1 - Agile process improvement in retrospectives T2 - 41st International Conference on Software Engineering: Companion Proceedings (ICSE-Companion) N2 - Working in iterations and repeatedly improving team workflows based on collected feedback is fundamental to agile software development processes. Scrum, the most popular agile method, provides dedicated retrospective meetings to reflect on the last development iteration and to decide on process improvement actions. However, agile methods do not prescribe how these improvement actions should be identified, managed or tracked in detail. The approaches to detect and remove problems in software development processes are therefore often based on intuition and prior experiences and perceptions of team members. Previous research in this area has focused on approaches to elicit a team's improvement opportunities as well as measurements regarding the work performed in an iteration, e.g. Scrum burn-down charts. Little research deals with the quality and nature of identified problems or how progress towards removing issues is measured. In this research, we investigate how agile development teams in the professional software industry organize their feedback and process improvement approaches. In particular, we focus on the structure and content of improvement and reflection meetings, i.e. retrospectives, and their outcomes. Researching how the vital mechanism of process improvement is implemented in practice in modern software development leads to a more complete picture of agile process improvement. KW - Agile KW - Scrum KW - software process improvement KW - retrospective Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-7281-1764-5 SN - 978-1-7281-1765-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/ICSE-Companion.2019.00063 SN - 2574-1934 SN - 2574-1926 SP - 150 EP - 152 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Heinz, Andreas A1 - Beck, Anne A1 - Rapp, Michael Armin T1 - Alcohol as an Environmental Mortality Hazard T2 - JAMA psychiatry Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2016.0399 SN - 2168-622X SN - 2168-6238 VL - 73 SP - 549 EP - 550 PB - American Veterinary Medical Association CY - Chicago ER - TY - GEN A1 - Grüne, Stefanie T1 - Allais on Intuitions and the Objective Reality of the Categories T2 - European journal of philosophy Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/ejop.12139 SN - 0966-8373 SN - 1468-0378 VL - 24 SP - 241 EP - 252 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Heinicker, Paul A1 - Likavcan, Lukas A1 - Lin, Qiao T1 - alt'ai: designing machine-to-machine interfaces for automated landscapes N2 - alt'ai is an agent-based simulation inspired by aesthetics, culture and environmental conditions of the Altai mountain region on the borders between Russia, Kazakhstan, China and Mongolia. It is set into a scenario of a remote automated landscape populated by sentient machines, where biological species, machines and environments autonomously interact to produce unforeseeable visual outputs. It poses a question of designing future machine-to-machine authentication protocols that are based on the use of images encoding agent behavior. Also, the simulation provides rich visual perspective on this challenge. The project pleads for a heavily aestheticized approach to design practice and highlights the importance of productively inefficient and information redundant systems. Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-4503-6311-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3306211.3320146 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Wippert, Pia-Maria A1 - Block, Andrea A1 - Mansuy, Isabelle M. A1 - Peters, Eva M. J. A1 - Rose, Matthias A1 - Rapp, Michael Armin A1 - Huppertz, Alexander A1 - Würtz-Kozak, Karin T1 - Alterations in Bone Homeostasis and Microstructure Related to Depression and Allostatic Load T2 - Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1159/000503640 SN - 0033-3190 SN - 1423-0348 VL - 88 IS - 6 SP - 383 EP - 385 PB - Karger CY - Basel ER - TY - GEN A1 - Aranda, Juan A1 - Schölzel, Mario A1 - Mendez, Diego A1 - Carrillo, Henry T1 - An energy consumption model for multiModal wireless sensor networks based on wake-up radio receivers T2 - 2018 IEEE Colombian Conference on Communications and Computing (COLCOM) N2 - Energy consumption is a major concern in Wireless Sensor Networks. A significant waste of energy occurs due to the idle listening and overhearing problems, which are typically avoided by turning off the radio, while no transmission is ongoing. The classical approach for allowing the reception of messages in such situations is to use a low-duty-cycle protocol, and to turn on the radio periodically, which reduces the idle listening problem, but requires timers and usually unnecessary wakeups. A better solution is to turn on the radio only on demand by using a Wake-up Radio Receiver (WuRx). In this paper, an energy model is presented to estimate the energy saving in various multi-hop network topologies under several use cases, when a WuRx is used instead of a classical low-duty-cycling protocol. The presented model also allows for estimating the benefit of various WuRx properties like using addressing or not. KW - Energy efficiency KW - multimodal wireless sensor network KW - low-duty-cycling KW - wake-up radio Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-6820-7 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/ColComCon.2018.8466728 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hernandez, Netzahualcoyotl A1 - Demiray, Burcu A1 - Arnrich, Bert A1 - Favela, Jesus T1 - An Exploratory Study to Detect Temporal Orientation Using Bluetooth's sensor T2 - PervasiveHealth'19: Proceedings of the 13th EAI International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare N2 - Mobile sensing technology allows us to investigate human behaviour on a daily basis. In the study, we examined temporal orientation, which refers to the capacity of thinking or talking about personal events in the past and future. We utilise the mksense platform that allows us to use the experience-sampling method. Individual's thoughts and their relationship with smartphone's Bluetooth data is analysed to understand in which contexts people are influenced by social environments, such as the people they spend the most time with. As an exploratory study, we analyse social condition influence through a collection of Bluetooth data and survey information from participant's smartphones. Preliminary results show that people are likely to focus on past events when interacting with close-related people, and focus on future planning when interacting with strangers. Similarly, people experience present temporal orientation when accompanied by known people. We believe that these findings are linked to emotions since, in its most basic state, emotion is a state of physiological arousal combined with an appropriated cognition. In this contribution, we envision a smartphone application for automatically inferring human emotions based on user's temporal orientation by using Bluetooth sensors, we briefly elaborate on the influential factor of temporal orientation episodes and conclude with a discussion and lessons learned. KW - Mobile sensing KW - Temporal orientation KW - Social environment KW - Human behaviour KW - Bluetooth Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-4503-6126-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3329189.3329223 SN - 2153-1633 SP - 292 EP - 297 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Patalas-Maliszewska, Justyna A1 - Krebs, Irene T1 - An Information System Supporting the Eliciting of Expert Knowledge for Successful IT Projects T2 - Information and Software Technologies, ICIST 2018 N2 - In order to guarantee the success of an IT project, it is necessary for a company to possess expert knowledge. The difficulty arises when experts no longer work for the company and it then becomes necessary to use their knowledge, in order to realise an IT project. In this paper, the ExKnowIT information system which supports the eliciting of expert knowledge for successful IT projects, is presented and consists of the following modules: (1) the identification of experts for successful IT projects, (2) the eliciting of expert knowledge on completed IT projects, (3) the expert knowledge base on completed IT projects, (4) the Group Method for Data Handling (GMDH) algorithm, (5) new knowledge in support of decisions regarding the selection of a manager for a new IT project. The added value of our system is that these three approaches, namely, the elicitation of expert knowledge, the success of an IT project and the discovery of new knowledge, gleaned from the expert knowledge base, otherwise known as the decision model, complement each other. KW - Expert knowledge KW - IT project KW - Information system KW - GMDH Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-3-319-99972-2 SN - 978-3-319-99971-5 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-99972-2_1 SN - 1865-0929 SN - 1865-0937 VL - 920 SP - 3 EP - 13 PB - Springer CY - Berlin ER - TY - GEN A1 - Serth, Sebastian A1 - Podlesny, Nikolai A1 - Bornstein, Marvin A1 - Lindemann, Jan A1 - Latt, Johanna A1 - Selke, Jan A1 - Schlosser, Rainer A1 - Boissier, Martin A1 - Uflacker, Matthias T1 - An interactive platform to simulate dynamic pricing competition on online marketplaces T2 - 2017 IEEE 21st International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing Conference (EDOC) N2 - E-commerce marketplaces are highly dynamic with constant competition. While this competition is challenging for many merchants, it also provides plenty of opportunities, e.g., by allowing them to automatically adjust prices in order to react to changing market situations. For practitioners however, testing automated pricing strategies is time-consuming and potentially hazardously when done in production. Researchers, on the other side, struggle to study how pricing strategies interact under heavy competition. As a consequence, we built an open continuous time framework to simulate dynamic pricing competition called Price Wars. The microservice-based architecture provides a scalable platform for large competitions with dozens of merchants and a large random stream of consumers. Our platform stores each event in a distributed log. This allows to provide different performance measures enabling users to compare profit and revenue of various repricing strategies in real-time. For researchers, price trajectories are shown which ease evaluating mutual price reactions of competing strategies. Furthermore, merchants can access historical marketplace data and apply machine learning. By providing a set of customizable, artificial merchants, users can easily simulate both simple rule-based strategies as well as sophisticated data-driven strategies using demand learning to optimize their pricing strategies. Y1 - 2017 SN - 978-1-5090-3045-3 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/EDOC.2017.17 SN - 2325-6354 SP - 61 EP - 66 PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Petrow, Theresia A1 - Heistermann, Maik A1 - Bronstert, Axel T1 - Analysis of Flash Floods in Germany T2 - Hydrologie und Wasserbewirtschaftung Y1 - 2017 SN - 1439-1783 VL - 61 SP - 212 EP - 212 PB - Bundesanst. für Gewässerkunde CY - Koblenz ER - TY - GEN A1 - Xenikoudakis, Georgios A1 - Ahmed, Mayeesha A1 - Harris, Jacob Colt A1 - Wadleigh, Rachel A1 - Paijmans, Johanna L. A. A1 - Hartmann, Stefanie A1 - Barlow, Axel A1 - Lerner, Heather A1 - Hofreiter, Michael T1 - Ancient DNA reveals twenty million years of aquatic life in beavers T2 - Current biology : CB N2 - Xenikoudakis et al. report a partial mitochondrial genome of the extinct giant beaver Castoroides and estimate the origin of aquatic behavior in beavers to approximately 20 million years. This time estimate coincides with the extinction of terrestrial beavers and raises the question whether the two events had a common cause. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2019.12.041 SN - 0960-9822 SN - 1879-0445 VL - 30 IS - 3 SP - R110 EP - R111 PB - Current Biology Ltd. CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Tristram, Hildegard L. C. T1 - Annotated Bibliography of English Studies (ABES), vol. 109: The Celtic Englishes N2 - This file contains 200 bibliographical entries on the most important publications in the field of the 'Celtic Englishes' with full summary of contents and classification of the varieties concerned (Irish English, Scottish English, Manx English, Welsh English, and Cornu-English). Y1 - 1997 UR - http://abes.tandf.co.uk/abes/ ER - TY - GEN A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Anomalous Diffusion in Membranes and the Cytoplasm of Biological Cells T2 - Biophysical journal Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2016.11.2577 SN - 0006-3495 SN - 1542-0086 VL - 112 IS - 3 SP - 476A EP - 476A PB - Cell Press CY - Cambridge ER - TY - GEN A1 - Quaisser, Erhard T1 - Antoni, C. ; Dalena, A., Discrete applied mathematics, 66 (1996), S. 75 - 79 BT - Discrete applied mathematics Y1 - 1996 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 - 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 - Ponce, Carol Barahona A1 - Scherer, Dominique A1 - Boekstegers, Felix A1 - Garate-Calderon, Valentina A1 - Jenab, Mazda A1 - Aleksandrova, Krasimira A1 - Katzke, Verena A1 - Weiderpass, Elisabete A1 - Bonet, Catalina A1 - Moradi, Tahereh A1 - Fischer, Krista A1 - Bossers, Willem A1 - Brenner, Hermann A1 - Schöttker, Ben A1 - Holleczek, Bernd A1 - Hveem, Kristian A1 - Eklund, Niina A1 - Voelker, Uwe A1 - Waldenberger, Melanie A1 - Bermejo, Justo Lorenzo T1 - Arsenic and gallbladder cancer risk BT - Mendelian randomization analysis of European prospective data T2 - International journal of cancer KW - arsenic KW - gallbladder cancer KW - Mendelian randomization Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.32837 SN - 0020-7136 SN - 1097-0215 VL - 146 IS - 9 SP - 2648 EP - 2650 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken 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 - Passarelli, Luigi A1 - Hainzl, Sebastian A1 - Cesca, Simone A1 - Maccaferri, Francesco A1 - Mucciarelli, Marco A1 - Roessler, Dirk A1 - Corbi, Fabio A1 - Dahm, Torsten A1 - Rivalta, Eleonora T1 - Aseismic transient driving the swarm-like seismic sequence in the Pollino range, Southern Italy (vol 201, pg 1553, 2015) T2 - Geophysical journal international KW - Seismicity and tectonics KW - Statistical seismology KW - Dynamics: seismotectonics Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggv425 SN - 0956-540X SN - 1365-246X VL - 204 SP - 365 EP - 365 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - GEN A1 - Schäpers, Björn A1 - Niemueller, Tim A1 - Lakemeyer, Gerhard A1 - Gebser, Martin A1 - Schaub, Torsten H. 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 - Polzin, Amin A1 - Rassaf, Tienush A1 - Boehm, Andreas A1 - Lueth, Anja A1 - Kleuser, Burkhard A1 - Zeus, Tobias A1 - Kelm, Malte A1 - Kroemer, Heyo K. A1 - Schroer, Karsten A1 - Rauch, Bernhard H. T1 - Aspirin inhibits release of platelet-derived sphingosine-1-phosphate in acute myocardial infarction T2 - INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY KW - Sphingosine-1-phosphate KW - Acute coronary syndrome KW - Platelets KW - Aspirin Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2013.10.050 SN - 0167-5273 SN - 1874-1754 VL - 170 IS - 2 SP - E23 EP - E24 PB - ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD CY - CLARE ER - TY - GEN A1 - Plauth, Max A1 - Sterz, Christoph A1 - Eberhardt, Felix A1 - Feinbube, Frank A1 - Polze, Andreas T1 - Assessing NUMA performance based on hardware event counters T2 - IEEE International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium Workshops (IPDPSW) N2 - Cost models play an important role for the efficient implementation of software systems. These models can be embedded in operating systems and execution environments to optimize execution at run time. Even though non-uniform memory access (NUMA) architectures are dominating today's server landscape, there is still a lack of parallel cost models that represent NUMA system sufficiently. Therefore, the existing NUMA models are analyzed, and a two-step performance assessment strategy is proposed that incorporates low-level hardware counters as performance indicators. To support the two-step strategy, multiple tools are developed, all accumulating and enriching specific hardware event counter information, to explore, measure, and visualize these low-overhead performance indicators. The tools are showcased and discussed alongside specific experiments in the realm of performance assessment. KW - Parallel programming KW - Performance analysis KW - Memory management Y1 - 2017 SN - 978-0-7695-6149-3 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/IPDPSW.2017.51 SN - 2164-7062 SP - 904 EP - 913 PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Boese, Adrian Daniel T1 - Assessment of coupled cluster theory and more approximate methods for Hydrogen Bonded Systems (vol 9, pg 4403, 2013) T2 - Journal of chemical theory and computation Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/ct500041j SN - 1549-9618 SN - 1549-9626 VL - 10 IS - 2 SP - 893 EP - 893 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - GEN A1 - Podlesny, Nikolai Jannik A1 - Kayem, Anne V. D. M. A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - Attribute Compartmentation and Greedy UCC Discovery for High-Dimensional Data Anonymisation T2 - Proceedings of the Ninth ACM Conference on Data and Application Security and Privacy N2 - High-dimensional data is particularly useful for data analytics research. In the healthcare domain, for instance, high-dimensional data analytics has been used successfully for drug discovery. Yet, in order to adhere to privacy legislation, data analytics service providers must guarantee anonymity for data owners. In the context of high-dimensional data, ensuring privacy is challenging because increased data dimensionality must be matched by an exponential growth in the size of the data to avoid sparse datasets. Syntactically, anonymising sparse datasets with methods that rely of statistical significance, makes obtaining sound and reliable results, a challenge. As such, strong privacy is only achievable at the cost of high information loss, rendering the data unusable for data analytics. In this paper, we make two contributions to addressing this problem from both the privacy and information loss perspectives. First, we show that by identifying dependencies between attribute subsets we can eliminate privacy violating attributes from the anonymised dataset. Second, to minimise information loss, we employ a greedy search algorithm to determine and eliminate maximal partial unique attribute combinations. Thus, one only needs to find the minimal set of identifying attributes to prevent re-identification. Experiments on a health cloud based on the SAP HANA platform using a semi-synthetic medical history dataset comprised of 109 attributes, demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach. Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-4503-6099-9 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3292006.3300019 SP - 109 EP - 119 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Ullrich, Andre A1 - Enke, Judith A1 - Teichmann, Malte A1 - Kress, Antonio A1 - Gronau, Norbert T1 - Audit - and then what? BT - a roadmap for digitization of learning factories T2 - Procedia Manufacturing N2 - Current trends such as digital transformation, Internet of Things, or Industry 4.0 are challenging the majority of learning factories. Regardless of whether a conventional learning factory, a model factory, or a digital learning factory, traditional approaches such as the monotonous execution of specific instructions don‘t suffice the learner’s needs, market requirements as well as especially current technological developments. Contemporary teaching environments need a clear strategy, a road to follow for being able to successfully cope with the changes and develop towards digitized learning factories. This demand driven necessity of transformation leads to another obstacle: Assessing the status quo and developing and implementing adequate action plans. Within this paper, details of a maturity-based audit of the hybrid learning factory in the Research and Application Centre Industry 4.0 and a thereof derived roadmap for the digitization of a learning factory are presented. KW - Audit KW - Digitization KW - Learning Factory KW - Roadmap Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.promfg.2019.03.025 SN - 2351-9789 VL - 31 SP - 162 EP - 168 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - GEN A1 - Nitze, Ingmar A1 - Grosse, Guido A1 - Jones, B. M. A1 - Romanovsky, Vladimir E. A1 - Boike, Julia T1 - Author Correction: Nitze, I; Grosse, G; Jones, B.M.; Romanovsky, V.E.; Boike, J.: Remote sensing quantifies widespread abundance of permafrost region disturbances across the Arctic and Subarctic. - Nature Communications. - 9 (2018), 5423 T2 - Nature Communications Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08375-y SN - 2041-1723 VL - 10 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Eckstein, Lars A1 - Schwarz, Anja T1 - Authors’ Response: The Making of Tupaia's Map Revisited T2 - The journal of pacific history Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/00223344.2019.1657500 SN - 1469-9605 SN - 0022-3344 VL - 54 IS - 4 SP - 549 EP - 561 PB - Routledge CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Rößler, Dirk A1 - Krüger, Frank A1 - Ohrnberger, Matthias A1 - Ehlert, Lutz T1 - Automatic near real-time characterisation of large earthquakes N2 - An der Universität Potsdam wird seit 2008 ein automatisiertes Verfahren angewandt, um Bruchparamter großer Erdbeben in quasi-Echtzeit, d.h. wenige Minuten nachdem sich das Beben ereignet hat, zu bestimmen und der Öffentlichkeit via Internet zur Verfügung zu stellen. Es ist vorgesehen, das System in das Deutsch-Indonesische Tsunamifrühwarnsystem (GITEWS) zu integrieren, für das es speziell konfiguriert ist. Wir bestimmen insbesondere die Dauer und die Ausdehnung des Erdbebens, sowie dessen Bruchgeschwindigkeit und -richtung. Dabei benutzen wir die Seismogramme der zuerst eintreffenden P Wellen vom Breitbandstationen in teleseimischer Entfernung vom Beben sowie herkömmliche Arrayverfahren in teilweise modifizierter Form. Die Semblance wir als Ähnlichkeitsmaß verwendet, um Seismogramme eines Stationsnetzes zu vergleichen. Im Falle eines Erdbebens ist die Semblance unter Berücksichtigung des Hypozentrums zur Herdzeit und während des Bruchvorgangs deutlich zeitlich und räumlich erhöht und konzentriert. Indem wir die Ergebnisse verschiedener Stationsnetzwerke kombinieren, erreichen wir Unabhängigkeit von der Herdcharakteristik und eine raum-zeitliche Auflösung, die es erlaubt die o.g. Parameter abzuleiten. In unserem Beitrag skizzieren wir die Methode. Anhand der beiden M8.0 Benkulu Erdbeben (Sumatra, Indonesien) vom 12.09.2007 und dem M8.0 Sichuan Ereignis (China) vom 12.05.2008 demonstrieren wir Auflösungsmöglichkeiten und vergleichen die Ergebnisse der automatisierten Echtzeitanwendung mit nachträglichen Berechnungen. Weiterhin stellen wir eine Internetseite zur Verfügung, die die Ergebnisse präsentiert und animiert. Diese kann z.B. in geowissenschaftlichen Einrichtungen an Computerterminals gezeigt werden. Die Internetauftritte haben die folgenden Adressen: http://www.geo.uni-potsdam.de/arbeitsgruppen/Geophysik_Seismologie/forschung/ruptrack/openday http://www.geo.uni-potsdam.de/arbeitsgruppen/Geophysik_Seismologie/forschung/ruptrack KW - Erdbeben KW - Arrayseismologie KW - Echtzeitanwendung KW - teleseismische Bruchverfolgung KW - earthquake KW - array seismology KW - real-time application KW - teleseismic rupture tracking Y1 - 2008 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-20191 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Rößler, Dirk A1 - Krüger, Frank A1 - Ohrnberger, Matthias T1 - Automatic near real-time characterisation of large earthquakes N2 - We use seismic array methods (semblance analysis) to image areas of seismic energy release in the Sunda Arc region and world-wide. Broadband seismograms at teleseismic distances (30° ≤ Δ ≤ 100°) are compared at several subarrays. Semblance maps of different subarrays are multiplied. High semblance tracked over long time (10s of second to minutes) and long distances indicate locations of earthquakes. The method allows resolution of rupture characteristics important for tsunami early warning: start and duration, velocity and direction, length and area. The method has been successfully applied to recent and historic events (M>6.5) and is now operational in real time. Results are obtained shortly after source time, see http://www.geo.uni-potsdam.de/Forschung/Geophysik/GITEWS/tsunami.htm). Comparison of manual and automatic processing are in good agreement. Computational effort is small. Automatic results may be obtained within 15 - 20 minutes after event occurrence. KW - Seismology KW - Earthquake KW - Tsunami KW - Array Seismology Y1 - 2008 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-18382 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Gawron, Marian A1 - Cheng, Feng A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - Automatic vulnerability classification using machine learning T2 - Risks and Security of Internet and Systems N2 - The classification of vulnerabilities is a fundamental step to derive formal attributes that allow a deeper analysis. Therefore, it is required that this classification has to be performed timely and accurate. Since the current situation demands a manual interaction in the classification process, the timely processing becomes a serious issue. Thus, we propose an automated alternative to the manual classification, because the amount of identified vulnerabilities per day cannot be processed manually anymore. We implemented two different approaches that are able to automatically classify vulnerabilities based on the vulnerability description. We evaluated our approaches, which use Neural Networks and the Naive Bayes methods respectively, on the base of publicly known vulnerabilities. KW - Vulnerability analysis KW - Security analytics KW - Data mining Machine learning KW - Neural Networks Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-3-319-76687-4 SN - 978-3-319-76686-7 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76687-4_1 SN - 0302-9743 SN - 1611-3349 SP - 3 EP - 17 PB - Springer CY - Cham ER - TY - GEN A1 - Wippert, Pia-Maria A1 - Puschmann, Anne-Katrin A1 - Schiltenwolf, Marcus A1 - Wiebking, Christine A1 - Mayer, Frank T1 - BACK PAIN: THE STUDY OF MECHANISMS AND THE TRANSLATION IN INTERVENTIONS WITHIN THE MISPEX NETWORK T2 - Psychosomatic medicine Y1 - 2016 SN - 0033-3174 SN - 1534-7796 VL - 78 SP - A91 EP - A91 PB - Elsevier CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - GEN A1 - Repke, Tim A1 - Krestel, Ralf A1 - Edding, Jakob A1 - Hartmann, Moritz A1 - Hering, Jonas A1 - Kipping, Dennis A1 - Schmidt, Hendrik A1 - Scordialo, Nico A1 - Zenner, Alexander T1 - Beacon in the Dark BT - a system for interactive exploration of large email Corpora T2 - Proceedings of the 27th ACM International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management N2 - The large amount of heterogeneous data in these email corpora renders experts' investigations by hand infeasible. Auditors or journalists, e.g., who are looking for irregular or inappropriate content or suspicious patterns, are in desperate need for computer-aided exploration tools to support their investigations. We present our Beacon system for the exploration of such corpora at different levels of detail. A distributed processing pipeline combines text mining methods and social network analysis to augment the already semi-structured nature of emails. The user interface ties into the resulting cleaned and enriched dataset. For the interface design we identify three objectives expert users have: gain an initial overview of the data to identify leads to investigate, understand the context of the information at hand, and have meaningful filters to iteratively focus onto a subset of emails. To this end we make use of interactive visualisations based on rearranged and aggregated extracted information to reveal salient patterns. Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-4503-6014-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3269206.3269231 SP - 1871 EP - 1874 PB - Association for Computing Machinery 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 - König, Julian A1 - Weymar, Mathias A1 - Friedman, Bruce T1 - Beyond Observation: Transcutaneous Vagus Nerve Stimulation in Psychophysiological Research T2 - Psychophysiology : journal of the Society for Psychophysiological Research Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/psyp.13439 SN - 0048-5772 SN - 1469-8986 VL - 56 SP - S11 EP - S11 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken 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 - Seyfried, Salim A1 - Rödel, Claudia Jasmin T1 - Blood flow matters in a zebrafish model of cerebral cavernous malformations T2 - Circulation research : an official journal of the American Heart Association Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.119.316286 SN - 0009-7330 SN - 1524-4571 VL - 126 IS - 1 SP - E1 EP - E2 PB - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins CY - Baltimore, Md. ER - TY - GEN A1 - Mondal, Suvendu Sekhar A1 - Holdt, Hans-Jürgen T1 - Breaking Down Chemical Weapons by Metal-Organic Frameworks T2 - Angewandte Chemie : a journal of the Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker ; International edition N2 - Seek and destroy: Filtration schemes and self-detoxifying protective fabrics based on the ZrIV-containing metal—organic frameworks (MOFs) MOF-808 and UiO-66 doped with LiOtBu have been developed that capture and hydrolytically detoxify simulants of nerve agents and mustard gas. Both MOFs function as highly catalytic elements in these applications. KW - heterogeneous catalysis KW - hydrolysis KW - metalorganic frameworks KW - nerve agents KW - silk fibroin Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.201508407 SN - 1433-7851 SN - 1521-3773 VL - 55 SP - 42 EP - 44 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - GEN A1 - Talukder, Srijeeta A1 - Sen, Shrabani A1 - Chakraborti, Prantik A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Banik, Suman K. A1 - Chaudhury, Pinaki T1 - Breathing dynamics based parameter sensitivity analysis of hetero-polymeric DNA T2 - The journal of chemical physics : bridges a gap between journals of physics and journals of chemistr N2 - We study the parameter sensitivity of hetero-polymeric DNA within the purview of DNA breathing dynamics. The degree of correlation between the mean bubble size and the model parameters is estimated for this purpose for three different DNA sequences. The analysis leads us to a better understanding of the sequence dependent nature of the breathing dynamics of hetero-polymeric DNA. Out of the 14 model parameters for DNA stability in the statistical Poland-Scheraga approach, the hydrogen bond interaction epsilon(hb)(AT) for an AT base pair and the ring factor. turn out to be the most sensitive parameters. In addition, the stacking interaction epsilon(st)(TA-TA) for an TA-TA nearest neighbor pair of base-pairs is found to be the most sensitive one among all stacking interactions. Moreover, we also establish that the nature of stacking interaction has a deciding effect on the DNA breathing dynamics, not the number of times a particular stacking interaction appears in a sequence. We show that the sensitivity analysis can be used as an effective measure to guide a stochastic optimization technique to find the kinetic rate constants related to the dynamics as opposed to the case where the rate constants are measured using the conventional unbiased way of optimization. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4871297 SN - 0021-9606 SN - 1089-7690 VL - 140 IS - 14 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - GEN A1 - Herzog, Benedict A1 - Hönig, Timo A1 - Schröder-Preikschat, Wolfgang A1 - Plauth, Max A1 - Köhler, Sven A1 - Polze, Andreas T1 - Bridging the Gap BT - Energy-efficient Execution of Software Workloads on Heterogeneous Hardware Components T2 - e-Energy '19: Proceedings of the Tenth ACM International Conference on Future Energy Systems N2 - The recent restructuring of the electricity grid (i.e., smart grid) introduces a number of challenges for today's large-scale computing systems. To operate reliable and efficient, computing systems must adhere not only to technical limits (i.e., thermal constraints) but they must also reduce operating costs, for example, by increasing their energy efficiency. Efforts to improve the energy efficiency, however, are often hampered by inflexible software components that hardly adapt to underlying hardware characteristics. In this paper, we propose an approach to bridge the gap between inflexible software and heterogeneous hardware architectures. Our proposal introduces adaptive software components that dynamically adapt to heterogeneous processing units (i.e., accelerators) during runtime to improve the energy efficiency of computing systems. Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-4503-6671-7 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3307772.3330176 SP - 428 EP - 430 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Laux, Eva-Maria A1 - Gibbons, J. A1 - Ermilova, Elena A1 - Bier, Frank Fabian A1 - Hölzel, Ralph T1 - Broadband dielectric spectroscopy of bovine serum albumin in the GHz range T2 - European biophysics journal : with biophysics letters ; an international journal of biophysics Y1 - 2017 SN - 0175-7571 SN - 1432-1017 VL - 46 SP - S347 EP - S347 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hanack, Katja A1 - Schloer, Anja A1 - Holzloehner, Pamela A1 - Listek, Martin A1 - Bauer, Cindy A1 - Butze, Monique A1 - Micheel, Burkhard A1 - Hentschel, Christian A1 - Sowa, Mandy A1 - Roggenbuck, Dirk A1 - Schierack, Peter A1 - Fuener, Jonas A1 - Schliebs, Erik A1 - Goihl, Alexander A1 - Reinhold, Dirk T1 - Camelid nanobodies specific to human pancreatic glycoprotein 2 T2 - The journal of immunology N2 - Pancreatic secretory zymogen-granule membrane glycoprotein 2 (GP2) has been identified to be a major autoantigenic target in Crohn’s disease patients. It was discussed recently that a long and a short isoform of GP2 exists whereas the short isoform is often detected by GP2-specific autoantibodies. In the outcome of inflammatory bowel diseases, these GP2-specific autoantibodies are discussed as new serological markers for diagnosis and therapeutic monitoring. To investigate this further, camelid nanobodies were generated by phage display and selected against the short isoform of GP2 in order to isolate specific tools for the discrimination of both isoforms. Nanobodies are single domain antibodies derived from camelid heavy chain only antibodies and characterized by a high stability and solubility. The selected candidates were expressed, purified and validated regarding their binding properties in different enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays formats, immunofluorescence, immunohistochemistry and surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. Four different nanobodies could be selected whereof three recognize the short isoform of GP2 very specifically and one nanobody showed a high binding capacity for both isoforms. The KD values measured for all nanobodies were between 1.3 nM and 2.3 pM indicating highly specific binders suitable for the application as diagnostic tool in inflammatory bowel disease. Y1 - 2016 SN - 0022-1767 SN - 1550-6606 VL - 196 SP - 313 EP - 328 PB - American Assoc. of Immunologists CY - Bethesda ER - TY - GEN A1 - Brinkmann, Maik A1 - Heine, Moreen T1 - Can Blockchain Leverage for New Public Governance? BT - a Conceptual Analysis on Process Level T2 - Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance N2 - New Public Governance (NPG) as a paradigm for collaborative forms of public service delivery and Blockchain governance are trending topics for researchers and practitioners alike. Thus far, each topic has, on the whole, been discussed separately. This paper presents the preliminary results of ongoing research which aims to shed light on the more concrete benefits of Blockchain for the purpose of NPG. For the first time, a conceptual analysis is conducted on process level to spot benefits and limitations of Blockchain-based governance. Per process element, Blockchain key characteristics are mapped to functional aspects of NPG from a governance perspective. The preliminary results show that Blockchain offers valuable support for governments seeking methods to effectively coordinate co-producing networks. However, the extent of benefits of Blockchain varies across the process elements. It becomes evident that there is a need for off-chain processes. It is, therefore, argued in favour of intensifying research on off-chain governance processes to better understand the implications for and influences on on-chain governance. KW - Blockchain KW - New Public Governance KW - Blockchain Governance KW - Co-production KW - Conceptual Fit KW - Blockchain-enabled Governance Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-4503-6644-1 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3326365.3326409 SP - 338 EP - 341 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York 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 - Pérez Chaparro, Camilo Germán Alberto A1 - Mayer, Frank A1 - Beckendorf, Claudia T1 - Cardiovascular drift response over two different constant-load exercises in healthy non-athletes BT - case study T2 - Medicine and science in sports and exercise : official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine N2 - Cardiovascular drift (CV-d) is a steady increase in heart rate (HR) over time while performing constant load moderate intensity exercise (CME) > 20 min. CV-d presents problems for the prescription of exercise intensity by means of HR, because the work rate (WR) during exercise must be adjusted to maintain target HR, thus disturbing the intended effect of the exercise intervention. It has been shown that the increase in HR during CME is due to changes in WR and not to CV-d. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1249/01.mss.0000561495.15163.50 SN - 0195-9131 SN - 1530-0315 VL - 51 IS - 6 SP - 329 EP - 329 PB - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hiemer, Stefan A1 - Rößler, Dirk A1 - Scherbaum, Frank T1 - Catalog of Swarm Earthquakes in Vogtland /West Bohemia in 2008/09 N2 - The document contains the catalog of earthquakes in Vogtland /West Bohemia within the period of 2008/10/19 -to- 2009/03/16. The events were recorded by a seismic mini-array operated by the Institute of Earthsciences, University of Postdam. N2 - Das Dokument enthält einen Katalog von Erdbeben im Vogtland/Westböhmen im Zeitraum 2008/10/19 -bis- 2009/03/16. Die Erdbeben wurden mit Hilfe eines seismologischen Miniarrays, welches vom Institut für Geowissenschaften, Universität Potsdam, aufgestellt wurde, registriert. KW - Vogtland/Westböhmen KW - Erdbebenschwarm 2008/09 KW - Arrayseismologie KW - Erdbebenkatalog KW - Vogtland/West Bohemia KW - earthquake swarm 2008/09 KW - array seismology KW - earthquake catalog Y1 - 2010 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-51710 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hiemer, Stefan A1 - Rößler, Dirk A1 - Scherbaum, Frank T1 - Catalog of Swarm Earthquakes in Vogtland /West Bohemia in 2008/09 N2 - The document contains the catalog of earthquakes in Vogtland /West Bohemia within the period of 2008/10/19 -to- 2009/03/16. The events were recorded by a seismic mini-array operated by the Institute of Earthsciences, University of Postdam. N2 - Das Dokument enthält einen Katalog von Erdbeben im Vogtland/Westböhmen im Zeitraum 2008/10/19 -bis- 2009/03/16. Die Erdbeben wurden mit Hilfe eines seismologischen Miniarrays, welches vom Institut für Geowissenschaften, Universität Potsdam, aufgestellt wurde, registriert. KW - Vogtland/Westböhmen KW - Erdbebenschwarm 2008/09 KW - Arrayseismologie KW - Erdbebenkatalog KW - Vogtland/West Bohemia KW - earthquake swarm 2008/09 KW - array seismology KW - earthquake catalog Y1 - 2010 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-53837 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Laucht, Manfred A1 - Blomeyer, Dorothea A1 - Buchmann, Arlette F. A1 - Treutlein, Jens A1 - Shmidt, Martin H. A1 - Esser, Günter A1 - Jennen-Steinmetz, Christine A1 - Rietschel, Marcella A1 - Zimmermann, Ulrich S. A1 - Banaschewski, Tobias T1 - Catechol-O-methyltransferase Val158Met genotype, parenting practices and adolescent alcohol use: testing the differential susceptibility hypothesis Y1 - 2012 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Liedhegener, Antonius A1 - Kösters, Christoph A1 - Brechenmacher, Thomas T1 - Catholicism BT - On the Past, Present, and Future of its modern Notion T2 - Historisches Jahrbuch Y1 - 2019 SN - 0018-2621 VL - 139 SP - 601 EP - 618 PB - Herder CY - Freiburg Breisgau 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 - Klotzek, Benno T1 - Chandehari, M., Self-Circumference of rotors Y1 - 1996 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Schomöller, Anne A1 - Risch, Lucie A1 - Kaplick, Hannes A1 - Schraplau, Anne A1 - Wochatz, Monique A1 - Engel, Tilman A1 - Sonnenburg, Dominik A1 - Mayer, Frank T1 - Changes in paraspinal muscle T2 times and creatine kinase after a bout of eccentric exercise T2 - Medicine and science in sports and exercise : official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine N2 - Eccentric (ECC) exercises might cause muscle damage, characterized by delayed-onset muscle soreness, elevated creatine kinase (CK) levels and local muscle oedema, shown by elevated T2 times in magnet resonance imaging (MRI) scans. Previous research suggests a high inter-individual difference regarding these systemic and local responses to eccentric workload. PURPOSE: To analyze ECC exercise-induced muscle damage in lumbar paraspinal muscles assessed via MRI. METHODS: Ten participants (3f/7m; 33±6y; 174±8cm; 71±12kg) were included in the study. Quantitative paraspinal muscle constitution of M. erector spinae and M. multifidius were assessed in supine position before and 72h after an intense eccentric trunk exercise bout in a mobile 1.5 tesla MRI device. MRI scans were recorded on spinal level L3 (T2-weighted TSE echo sequences, 11 slices, 2mm slice thickness, 3mm gap, echo times: 20, 40, 60, 80, 100ms, TR time: 2500ms). Muscle T2 times were calculated for manually traced regions of interest of the respective muscles with an imaging software. The exercise protocol was performed in an isokinetic device and consisted of 120sec alternating ECC trunk flexion-extension with maximal effort. Venous blood samples were taken before and 72h after the ECC exercise. Descriptive statistics (mean±SD) and t-testing for pre-post ECC exercises were performed. RESULTS: T2 times increased from pre- to post-ECC MRI measurements from 55±3ms to 79±28ms in M. erector spinae and from 62±5ms to 78±24ms in M. multifidius (p<0.001). CK increased from 126±97 U/L to 1447±20579 U/L. High SDs of T2 time and CK in post-ECC measures could be due to inter-individual reactions to ECC exercises. 3 participants showed high local and systemic reactions (HR) with T2 time increases of 120±24% (M. erector spinae) and 73±50% (M. multifidius). In comparison, the remaining 7 participants showed increases of 11±12% (M. erector spinae) and 7±9% (M. multifidius) in T2 time. Mean CK increased 9.5-fold in the 3 HR subjects compared with the remaining 7 subjects. CONCLUSIONS: The 120sec maximal ECC trunk flexion-extension protocol induced high amounts of muscle damage in 3 participants. Moderate to low responses were found in the remaining 7 subjects, assuming that inter-individual predictors play a role regarding physiological responses to ECC workload. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1249/01.mss.0000685648.68626.f1 SN - 0195-9131 SN - 1530-0315 SN - 0025-7990 VL - 52 IS - 17 SP - 929 EP - 929 PB - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - GEN A1 - Maier, Natalia A1 - Holzlöhner, Pamela A1 - Hoenow, Anja A1 - Scheunemann, Astrid A1 - Weschke, Daniel A1 - Hanack, Katja T1 - Characterization of monoclonal antibodies generated by in vitro immunization T2 - The journal of immunology N2 - Monoclonal antibodies are highly valuable tools in biomedicine but the generation by hybridoma technology is very time-consuming and elaborate. In order to circumvent the consisting drawbacks an in vitro immunization approach was established by which murine as well as human monoclonal antibodies against a viral coat protein could be developed. The in vitro immunization process was performed by isolation of murine hematopoietic stem cells or human monocytes and an in vitro differentiation into immature dendritic cells. After antigen loading the cells were co-cultivated with naive T and B lymphocytes for three days in order to obtain antigen-specific B lymphocytes in culture, followed by fusion with murine myeloma cells or human/murine heteromyeloma cells. Antigen-specific hybridomas were selected and the generated antibodies were purified and characterized in this study by ELISA, western blot, gene sequencing, affinity measurements. Further the characteristics were compared to a monoclonal antibody against the same target generated by conventional hybridoma technology. Isotype detection revealed a murine IgM and a human IgG4 antibody in comparison to an IgG1 for the conventionally generated antibody. The antibodies derived from in vitro immunization showed indeed a lower affinity for the antigen as compared to the conventionally generated one, which is probably based on the significantly shorter B cell maturation (3 days) during the immunization process. Nevertheless, they were suitable for building up a sandwich based detection system. Therefore, the in vitro immunization approach seems to be a good and particularly fast alternative to conventional hybridoma technology. Y1 - 2016 SN - 0022-1767 SN - 1550-6606 VL - 196 PB - American Assoc. of Immunologists CY - Bethesda ER - TY - GEN A1 - Schraplau, Anne A1 - Sonnenburg, Dominik A1 - Wochatz, Monique A1 - Engel, Tilman A1 - Schomöller, Anne A1 - Risch, Lucie A1 - Kaplick, Hannes A1 - Mayer, Frank T1 - Characterization of muscle damage and inflammation following repeated maximal eccentric loading of the trunk T2 - Medicine and science in sports and exercise : official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine N2 - Eccentric exercises (ECC) induce reversible muscle damage, delayed-onset muscle soreness and an inflammatory reaction that is often followed by a systemic anti-inflammatory response. Thus, ECC might be beneficial for treatment of metabolic disorders which are frequently accompanied by a low-grade systemic inflammation. However, extent and time course of a systemic immune response after repeated ECC bouts are poorly characterized. PURPOSE: To analyze the (anti-)inflammatory response after repeated ECC loading of the trunk. METHODS: Ten healthy participants (33 ± 6 y; 173 ± 14 cm; 74 ± 16 kg) performed three isokinetic strength measurements of the trunk (concentric (CON), ECC1, ECC2, each 2 wks apart; flexion/extension, velocity 60°/s, 120s MVC). Pre- and 4, 24, 48, 72, 168h post-exercise, muscle soreness (numeric rating scale, NRS) was assessed and blood samples were taken and analyzed [Creatine kinase (CK), C-reactive protein (CRP), Interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-10, Tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α)]. Statistics were done by Friedman‘s test with Dunn‘s post hoc test (α=.05). RESULTS: Mean peak torque was higher during ECC1 (319 ± 142 Nm) than during CON (268 ± 108 Nm; p<.05) and not different between ECC1 and ECC2 (297 ± 126 Nm; p>.05). Markers of muscle damage (peaks post-ECC1: NRS 48h, 4.4±2.9; CK 72h, 14407 ± 19991 U/l) were higher after ECC1 than after CON and ECC2 (p<.05). The responses over 72h (stated as Area under the Curve, AUC) were abolished after ECC2 compared to ECC1 (p<.05) indicating the presence of the repeated bout effect. CRP levels were not changed. IL-6 levels increased 2-fold post-ECC1 (pre: 0.5 ± 0.4 vs. 72h: 1.0 ± 0.8 pg/ml). The IL-6 response was enhanced after ECC1 (AUC 61 ± 37 pg/ml*72h) compared to CON (AUC 33 ± 31 pg/ml*72h; p<.05). After ECC2, the IL-6 response (AUC 43 ± 25 pg/ml*72h) remained lower than post-ECC1, but the difference was not statistically significant. Serum levels of TNF-α and of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 were below detection limits. Overall, markers of muscle damage and immune response showed high inter-individual variability. CONCLUSION: Despite maximal ECC loading of a large muscle group, no anti-inflammatory and just weak inflammatory responses were detected in healthy adults. Whether ECC elicits a different reaction in inflammatory clinical conditions is unclear. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1249/01.mss.0000679532.65880.af SN - 0195-9131 SN - 1530-0315 VL - 52 IS - 7S SP - 497 EP - 497 PB - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - GEN A1 - Zen, Achmad T1 - Charge Transport in Poly(3-hexylthiophene) and in Highly Soluble Obligothiophene Field-Effect Transistors Y1 - 2006 CY - Potsdam ER - TY - GEN A1 - Spahn, Frank A1 - Seiss, Martin T1 - Charges dropped T2 - Nature physics Y1 - 2015 SN - 1745-2473 SN - 1745-2481 VL - 11 IS - 9 SP - 709 EP - 710 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Nojima, Hiroyuki A1 - Konishi, Takanori A1 - Japtok, Lukasz A1 - Kleuser, Burkhard A1 - Edwards, Michael J. A1 - Gulbins, Erich A1 - Lentsch, Alex B. T1 - Chemokine receptors, CXCR1 and CXCR2, differentially regulate exosome release in hepatocytes T2 - Hepatology : official journal of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases Y1 - 2016 SN - 0270-9139 SN - 1527-3350 VL - 64 SP - 165A EP - 165A PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Teif, Vladimir B. A1 - Cherstvy, Andrey G. T1 - Chromatin and epigenetics: current biophysical views T2 - AIMS biophysics N2 - Recent advances in high-throughput sequencing experiments and their theoretical descriptions have determined fast dynamics of the "chromatin and epigenetics" field, with new concepts appearing at high rate. This field includes but is not limited to the study of DNA-protein-RNA interactions, chromatin packing properties at different scales, regulation of gene expression and protein trafficking in the cell nucleus, binding site search in the crowded chromatin environment and modulation of physical interactions by covalent chemical modifications of the binding partners. The current special issue does not pretend for the full coverage of the field, but it rather aims to capture its development and provide a snapshot of the most recent concepts and approaches. Eighteen open-access articles comprising this issue provide a delicate balance between current theoretical and experimental biophysical approaches to uncover chromatin structure and understand epigenetic regulation, allowing free flow of new ideas and preliminary results. KW - chromatin KW - epigenetics KW - linker histones KW - nucleosome KW - DNA-protein binding KW - histone modifications KW - remodelers KW - topologically associated domains KW - DNA methylation KW - DNA supercoiling Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3934/biophy.2016.1.88 SN - 2377-9098 VL - 3 SP - 88 EP - 98 PB - American Institute of Mathematical Sciences CY - Springfield ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bacskai-Atkari, Julia A1 - Baudisch, Lisa T1 - Clause typing in Germanic BT - A questionnaire and its results N2 - The questionnaire investigates the functional left periphery of various finite clauses in Germanic languages, with particular attention paid to clause-typing elements and the combinations thereof. The questionnaire is mostly concerned with clause typing in embedded clauses, but main clause counterparts are also considered for comparative purposes. The chief aim was to achieve comparable results across Germanic languages, though the standardised questionnaire may also be helpful in the study of other languages, too. Most questions examine the availability of various complementisers and clause-typing operators, and in some cases the movement of verbs to the left periphery is also taken into account. The questionnaire is split into seven major parts according to the types of clauses under scrutiny. All instructions were given in English and the individual questions either concern translations of given sentences from English into the target language, and/or they ask for specific details about the constructions in the target language. The present document contains the questionnaire itself (together with the instructions given at the beginning of the questionnaire and at the beginning of the individual sections, as well as the questions asking for personal data), the sociolinguistic data of the speakers, and the actual results for the individual languages. Five Germanic languages are included: Dutch, Danish, Icelandic, Norwegian and Swedish. For each language, two informants were recruited. Given the small number of informants, the present study serves as a qualitative investigation and as a basis for further, quantitative and experimental studies. N2 - Der Fragebogen untersucht die funktionale linke Peripherie von sämtlichen finiten Sätzen in germanischen Sprachen, wobei Elemente und deren Kombinationen, die den Satztyp bestimmen, im Vordergrund stehen. Der Fokus liegt insbesondere auf der Satztypmarkierung in eingebetteten Sätzen, jedoch werden auch Matrixsätze zum Vergleich herangezogen. Das Hauptziel war es, vergleichbare Ergebnisse zwischen germanischen Sprachen zu erhalten, jedoch kann der standardisierte Fragebogen auch bei der Untersuchung anderer Sprachen hilfreich sein. Die meisten Fragen beziehen sich auf die Einsetzbarkeit verschiedener Komplementierer und den Satztyp bestimmender Operatoren, und in einigen Fällen wird auch die Verbbewegung zur linken Peripherie berücksichtigt. Der Fragebogen untergliedert sich in sieben größere Abschnitte, je nach untersuchtem Satztyp. Alle Anweisungen wurden auf Englisch formuliert und die einzelnen Fragen beziehen sich auf Übersetzungen von auf Englisch gegebenen Sätzen in die Zielsprache, und/oder erkundigen sich über Einzelheiten der Konstruktionen in der Zielsprache. Das vorliegende Dokument beinhaltet den Fragebogen (samt den Anweisungen am Anfang des Fragebogens und am Anfang der einzelnen Abschnitte, wie auch den Fragen bezüglich persönlichen Daten), die soziolinguistischen Daten der Informanten, und die Ergebnisse für die einzelnen Sprachen. Fünf germanische Sprachen sind enthalten: Niederländisch, Dänisch, Isländisch, Norwegisch und Schwedisch. Es gaben je zwei Informanten pro Sprache. Da die Anzahl der Informanten niedrig ist, dient die vorliegende Studie als qualitative Untersuchung und als Basis für weitere, quantitative und experimentelle Studien. KW - clause type KW - complementiser KW - Danish KW - Dutch KW - Icelandic KW - left periphery KW - Norwegian KW - operator KW - syntax KW - Swedish KW - Dänisch KW - Isländisch KW - Komplementierer KW - linke Peripherie KW - Niederländisch KW - Norwegisch KW - Operator KW - Satztyp KW - Schwedisch KW - Syntax Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-406810 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 - Lenton, Timothy M. A1 - Rockstroem, Johan A1 - Gaffney, Owen A1 - Rahmstorf, Stefan A1 - Richardson, Katherine A1 - Steffen, Will A1 - Schellnhuber, Hans Joachim T1 - Climate tipping points - too risky to bet against : Comment T2 - Nature : the international weekly journal of science Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-019-03595-0 SN - 0028-0836 SN - 1476-4687 VL - 575 IS - 7784 SP - 592 EP - 595 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kubatova, B. A1 - Kubát, Jiří A1 - Hamann, Wolf-Rainer A1 - Oskinova, Lida T1 - Clumping in Massive Star Winds and its Possible Connection to the B[e] Phenomenon T2 - The B(e) Phenomenon: Forty Years of Studies : proceedings of a conference held at Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic, 27 June-1 July 2016 N2 - It has been observationally established that winds of hot massive stars have highly variable characteristics. The variability evident in the winds is believed to be caused by structures on a broad range of spatial scales. Small-scale structures (clumping) in stellar winds of hot stars are possible consequence of an instability appearing in their radiation hydrodynamics. To understand how clumping may influence calculation of theoretical spectra, different clumping properties and their 3D nature have to be taken into account. Properties of clumping have been examined using our 3D radiative transfer calculations. Effects of clumping for the case of the B[e] phenomenon are discussed. Y1 - 2017 SN - 978-1-58381-900-5 SN - 978-1-58381-901-2 VL - 508 SP - 45 EP - 50 PB - Astronomical Soceity of the Pacific CY - San Fransisco 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 - Laux, Eva-Maria A1 - Docoslis, A. A1 - Wenger, C. A1 - Bier, Frank Fabian A1 - Hölzel, Ralph T1 - Combination of dielectrophoresis and SERS for bacteria detection and characterization T2 - European biophysics journal : with biophysics letters ; an international journal of biophysics Y1 - 2017 SN - 0175-7571 SN - 1432-1017 VL - 46 SP - S331 EP - S331 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Alsemgeest, Jitse A1 - Schröder, S. A1 - Boettger, Ute A1 - Pavlov, S. G. A1 - Weber, I. A1 - Greshake, A. A1 - Knöfler, H. -R. A1 - Altenberger, Uwe A1 - Hübers, H. -W. T1 - COMBINED RAMAN-LIBS STUDIES ON IRON SULFIDES TO INVESTIGATE THE EFECTS OF THE LIBS PLASMA ON THE MINERAL COMPOSITION. T2 - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Y1 - 2016 SN - 1086-9379 SN - 1945-5100 VL - 51 SP - A147 EP - A147 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Goychuk, Igor T1 - Comment on "Anomalous Escape Governed by Thermal 1/f Noise" Reply (R. K. Singh) T2 - Physical review letters Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.123.238902 SN - 0031-9007 SN - 1079-7114 VL - 123 IS - 23 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - GEN A1 - Zöller, Gert T1 - Comment on "Estimation of Earthquake Hazard Parameters from Incomplete Data Files. Part III. Incorporation of Uncertainty of Earthquake-Occurrence Model" by Andrzej Kijko, Ansie Smit, and Markvard A. Sellevoll T2 - Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America N2 - Kijko et al. (2016) present various methods to estimate parameters that are relevant for probabilistic seismic-hazard assessment. One of these parameters, although not the most influential, is the maximum possible earthquake magnitude m(max). I show that the proposed estimation of m(max) is based on an erroneous equation related to a misuse of the estimator in Cooke (1979) and leads to unstable results. So far, reported finite estimations of m(max) arise from data selection, because the estimator in Kijko et al. (2016) diverges with finite probability. This finding is independent of the assumed distribution of earthquake magnitudes. For the specific choice of the doubly truncated Gutenberg-Richter distribution, I illustrate the problems by deriving explicit equations. Finally, I conclude that point estimators are generally not a suitable approach to constrain m(max). Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1785/0120160193 SN - 0037-1106 SN - 1943-3573 VL - 107 SP - 1975 EP - 1978 PB - Seismological Society of America CY - Albany ER - TY - GEN A1 - Berenstein, Igal A1 - Beta, Carsten A1 - De Decker, Yannick T1 - Comment on "Flow-induced arrest of spatiotemporal chaos and transition to a stationary pattern in the Gray-Scott model" T2 - Physical review : E, Statistical, nonlinear and soft matter physics N2 - In this Comment, we review the results of pattern formation in a reaction-diffusion-advection system following the kinetics of the Gray-Scott model. A recent paper by Das [Phys. Rev. E 92, 052914 (2015)] shows that spatiotemporal chaos of the intermittency type can disappear as the advective flow is increased. This study, however, refers to a single point in the space of kinetic parameters of the original Gray-Scott model. Here we show that the wealth of patterns increases substantially as some of these parameters are changed. In addition to spatiotemporal intermittency, defect-mediated turbulence can also be found. In all cases, however, the chaotic behavior is seen to disappear as the advective flow is increased, following a scenario similar to what was reported in our earlier work [I. Berenstein and C. Beta, Phys. Rev. E 86, 056205 (2012)] as well as by Das. We also point out that a similar phenomenon can be found in other reaction-diffusion-advection models, such as the Oregonator model for the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction under flow conditions. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.94.046201 SN - 2470-0045 SN - 2470-0053 VL - 94 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park 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 - 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 -