004 Datenverarbeitung; Informatik
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Graph repair, restoring consistency of a graph, plays a prominent role in several areas of computer science and beyond: For example, in model-driven engineering, the abstract syntax of models is usually encoded using graphs. Flexible edit operations temporarily create inconsistent graphs not representing a valid model, thus requiring graph repair. Similarly, in graph databases—managing the storage and manipulation of graph data—updates may cause that a given database does not satisfy some integrity constraints, requiring also graph repair. We present a logic-based incremental approach to graph repair, generating a sound and complete (upon termination) overview of least-changing repairs. In our context, we formalize consistency by so-called graph conditions being equivalent to first-order logic on graphs. We present two kind of repair algorithms: State-based repair restores consistency independent of the graph update history, whereas deltabased (or incremental) repair takes this history explicitly into account. Technically, our algorithms rely on an existing model generation algorithm for graph conditions implemented in AutoGraph. Moreover, the delta-based approach uses the new concept of satisfaction (ST) trees for encoding if and how a graph satisfies a graph condition. We then demonstrate how to manipulate these STs incrementally with respect to a graph update.
Die HPI Schul-Cloud
(2019)
Die digitale Transformation durchdringt alle gesellschaftlichen Ebenen und Felder, nicht zuletzt auch das Bildungssystem. Dieses ist auf die Veränderungen kaum vorbereitet und begegnet ihnen vor allem auf Basis des Eigenengagements seiner Lehrer*innen. Strukturelle Reaktionen auf den Mangel an qualitativ hochwertigen Fortbildungen, auf schlecht ausgestattete Unterrichtsräume und nicht professionell gewartete Computersysteme gibt es erst seit kurzem. Doch auch wenn Beharrungskräfte unter Pädagog*innen verbreitet sind, erfordert die Transformation des Systems Schule auch eine neue Mentalität und neue Arbeits- und Kooperationsformen.
Zeitgemäßer Unterricht benötigt moderne Technologie und zeitgemäße IT-Architekturen. Nur Systeme, die für Lehrer*innen und Schüler*innen problemlos verfügbar, benutzerfreundlich zu bedienen und didaktisch flexibel einsetzbar sind, finden in Schulen Akzeptanz. Hierfür haben wir die HPI Schul-Cloud entwickelt. Sie ermöglicht den einfachen Zugang zu neuesten, professionell gewarteten Anwendungen, verschiedensten digitalen Medien, die Vernetzung verschiedener Lernorte und den rechtssicheren Einsatz von Kommunikations- und Kollaborationstools.
Die Entwicklung der HPI Schul-Cloud ist umso notwendiger, als dass rechtliche Anforderungen - insbesondere aus der Datenschutzgrundverordnung der EU herrührend - den Einsatz von Cloud-Anwendungen, die in der Arbeitswelt verbreitet sind, in Schulen unmöglich machen. Im Bildungsbereich verbreitete Anwendungen sind größtenteils technisch veraltet und nicht benutzerfreundlich.
Dies nötigt die Bundesländer zu kostspieligen Eigenentwicklungen mit Aufwänden im zweistelligen Millionenbereich - Projekte die teilweise gescheitert sind. Dank der modularen Micro-Service-Architektur können die Bundesländer zukünftig auf die HPI Schul-Cloud als technische Grundlage für ihre Eigen- oder Gemeinschaftsprojekte zurückgreifen. Hierfür gilt es, eine nachhaltige Struktur für die Weiterentwicklung der Open-Source-Software HPI Schul-Cloud zu schaffen.
Dieser Bericht beschreibt den Entwicklungsstand und die weiteren Perspektiven des Projekts HPI Schul-Cloud im Januar 2019. 96 Schulen deutschlandweit nutzen die HPI Schul-Cloud, bereitgestellt durch das Hasso-Plattner-Institut. Weitere 45 Schulen und Studienseminare nutzen die Niedersächsische Bildungscloud, die technisch auf der HPI Schul-Cloud basiert. Das vom Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung geförderte Projekt läuft in der gegenwärtigen Roll-Out-Phase bis zum 31. Juli 2021. Gemeinsam mit unserem Kooperationspartner MINT-EC streben wir an, die HPI Schul-Cloud möglichst an allen Schulen des Netzwerks einzusetzen.
With the growth of information technology, patient attitudes are shifting – away from passively receiving care towards actively taking responsibility for their well- being. Handling doctor-patient relationships collaboratively and providing patients access to their health information are crucial steps in empowering patients. In mental healthcare, the implicit consensus amongst practitioners has been that sharing medical records with patients may have an unpredictable, harmful impact on clinical practice. In order to involve patients more actively in mental healthcare processes, Tele-Board MED (TBM) allows for digital collaborative documentation in therapist-patient sessions. The TBM software system offers a whiteboard-inspired graphical user interface that allows therapist and patient to jointly take notes during the treatment session. Furthermore, it provides features to automatically reuse the digital treatment session notes for the creation of treatment session summaries and clinical case reports. This thesis presents the development of the TBM system and evaluates its effects on 1) the fulfillment of the therapist’s duties of clinical case documentation, 2) patient engagement in care processes, and 3) the therapist-patient relationship. Following the design research methodology, TBM was developed and tested in multiple evaluation studies in the domains of cognitive behavioral psychotherapy and addiction care. The results show that therapists are likely to use TBM with patients if they have a technology-friendly attitude and when its use suits the treatment context. Support in carrying out documentation duties as well as fulfilling legal requirements contributes to therapist acceptance. Furthermore, therapists value TBM as a tool to provide a discussion framework and quick access to worksheets during treatment sessions. Therapists express skepticism, however, regarding technology use in patient sessions and towards complete record transparency in general. Patients expect TBM to improve the communication with their therapist and to offer a better recall of discussed topics when taking a copy of their notes home after the session. Patients are doubtful regarding a possible distraction of the therapist and usage in situations when relationship-building is crucial. When applied in a clinical environment, collaborative note-taking with TBM encourages patient engagement and a team feeling between therapist and patient. Furthermore, it increases the patient’s acceptance of their diagnosis, which in turn is an important predictor for therapy success. In summary, TBM has a high potential to deliver more than documentation support and record transparency for patients, but also to contribute to a collaborative doctor-patient relationship. This thesis provides design implications for the development of digital collaborative documentation systems in (mental) healthcare as well as recommendations for a successful implementation in clinical practice.
In the era of social networks, internet of things and location-based services, many online services produce a huge amount of data that have valuable objective information, such as geographic coordinates and date time. These characteristics (parameters) in the combination with a textual parameter bring the challenge for the discovery of geospatiotemporal knowledge. This challenge requires efficient methods for clustering and pattern mining in spatial, temporal and textual spaces.
In this thesis, we address the challenge of providing methods and frameworks for geospatiotemporal data analytics. As an initial step, we address the challenges of geospatial data processing: data gathering, normalization, geolocation, and storage. That initial step is the basement to tackle the next challenge -- geospatial clustering challenge. The first step of this challenge is to design the method for online clustering of georeferenced data. This algorithm can be used as a server-side clustering algorithm for online maps that visualize massive georeferenced data. As the second step, we develop the extension of this method that considers, additionally, the temporal aspect of data. For that, we propose the density and intensity-based geospatiotemporal clustering algorithm with fixed distance and time radius.
Each version of the clustering algorithm has its own use case that we show in the thesis.
In the next chapter of the thesis, we look at the spatiotemporal analytics from the perspective of the sequential rule mining challenge. We design and implement the framework that transfers data into textual geospatiotemporal data - data that contain geographic coordinates, time and textual parameters. By this way, we address the challenge of applying pattern/rule mining algorithms in geospatiotemporal space. As the applicable use case study, we propose spatiotemporal crime analytics -- discovery spatiotemporal patterns of crimes in publicly available crime data.
The second part of the thesis, we dedicate to the application part and use case studies. We design and implement the application that uses the proposed clustering algorithms to discover knowledge in data. Jointly with the application, we propose the use case studies for analysis of georeferenced data in terms of situational and public safety awareness.
Graph repair, restoring consistency of a graph, plays a prominent role in several areas of computer science and beyond: For example, in model-driven engineering, the abstract syntax of models is usually encoded using graphs. Flexible edit operations temporarily create inconsistent graphs not representing a valid model, thus requiring graph repair. Similarly, in graph databases—managing the storage and manipulation of graph data—updates may cause that a given database does not satisfy some integrity constraints, requiring also graph repair.
We present a logic-based incremental approach to graph repair, generating a sound and complete (upon termination) overview of least-changing repairs. In our context, we formalize consistency by so-called graph conditions being equivalent to first-order logic on graphs. We present two kind of repair algorithms: State-based repair restores consistency independent of the graph update history, whereas deltabased (or incremental) repair takes this history explicitly into account. Technically, our algorithms rely on an existing model generation algorithm for graph conditions implemented in AutoGraph. Moreover, the delta-based approach uses the new concept of satisfaction (ST) trees for encoding if and how a graph satisfies a graph condition. We then demonstrate how to manipulate these STs incrementally with respect to a graph update.
In den letzten Jahren ist die Aufnahme und Verbreitung von Videos immer einfacher geworden. Daher sind die Relevanz und Beliebtheit zur Aufnahme von Vorlesungsvideos in den letzten Jahren stark angestiegen. Dies führt zu einem großen Datenbestand an Vorlesungsvideos in den Video-Vorlesungsarchiven der Universitäten. Durch diesen wachsenden Datenbestand wird es allerdings für die Studenten immer schwieriger, die relevanten Videos eines Vorlesungsarchivs aufzufinden. Zusätzlich haben viele Lerninteressierte durch ihre alltägliche Arbeit und familiären Verpflichtungen immer weniger Zeit sich mit dem Lernen zu beschäftigen. Ein weiterer Aspekt, der das Lernen im Internet erschwert, ist, dass es durch soziale Netzwerke und anderen Online-Plattformen vielfältige Ablenkungsmöglichkeiten gibt. Daher ist das Ziel dieser Arbeit, Möglichkeiten aufzuzeigen, welche das E-Learning bieten kann, um Nutzer beim Lernprozess zu unterstützen und zu motivieren.
Das Hauptkonzept zur Unterstützung der Studenten ist das präzise Auffinden von Informationen in den immer weiter wachsenden Vorlesungsvideoarchiven. Dazu werden die Vorlesungen im Voraus analysiert und die Texte der Vorlesungsfolien mit verschiedenen Methoden indexiert. Daraufhin können die Studenten mit der Suche oder dem Lecture-Butler Lerninhalte entsprechend Ihres aktuellen Wissensstandes auffinden. Die möglichen verwendeten Technologien für das Auffinden wurden, sowohl technisch, als auch durch Studentenumfragen erfolgreich evaluiert. Zur Motivation von Studenten in Vorlesungsarchiven werden diverse Konzepte betrachtet und die Umsetzung evaluiert, die den Studenten interaktiv in den Lernprozess einbeziehen.
Neben Vorlesungsarchiven existieren sowohl im privaten als auch im dienstlichen Weiterbildungsbereich die in den letzten Jahren immer beliebter werdenden MOOCs. Generell sind die Abschlussquoten von MOOCs allerdings mit durchschnittlich 7% eher gering. Daher werden Motivationslösungen für MOOCs im Bereich von eingebetteten Systemen betrachtet, die in praktischen Programmierkursen Anwendung finden. Zusätzlich wurden Kurse evaluiert, welche die Programmierung von eingebetteten Systemen behandeln. Die Verfügbarkeit war bei Kursen von bis zu 10.000 eingeschriebenen Teilnehmern hierbei kein schwerwiegendes Problem. Die Verwendung von eingebetteten Systemen in Programmierkursen sind bei den Studenten in der praktischen Umsetzung auf sehr großes Interesse gestoßen.
Technical report
(2019)
Design and Implementation of service-oriented architectures imposes a huge number of research questions from the fields of software engineering, system analysis and modeling, adaptability, and application integration. Component orientation and web services are two approaches for design and realization of complex web-based system. Both approaches allow for dynamic application adaptation as well as integration of enterprise application.
Commonly used technologies, such as J2EE and .NET, form de facto standards for the realization of complex distributed systems. Evolution of component systems has lead to web services and service-based architectures. This has been manifested in a multitude of industry standards and initiatives such as XML, WSDL UDDI, SOAP, etc. All these achievements lead to a new and promising paradigm in IT systems engineering which proposes to design complex software solutions as collaboration of contractually defined software services.
Service-Oriented Systems Engineering represents a symbiosis of best practices in object-orientation, component-based development, distributed computing, and business process management. It provides integration of business and IT concerns.
The annual Ph.D. Retreat of the Research School provides each member the opportunity to present his/her current state of their research and to give an outline of a prospective Ph.D. thesis. Due to the interdisciplinary structure of the research school, this technical report covers a wide range of topics. These include but are not limited to: Human Computer Interaction and Computer Vision as Service; Service-oriented Geovisualization Systems; Algorithm Engineering for Service-oriented Systems; Modeling and Verification of Self-adaptive Service-oriented Systems; Tools and Methods for Software Engineering in Service-oriented Systems; Security Engineering of Service-based IT Systems; Service-oriented Information Systems; Evolutionary Transition of Enterprise Applications to Service Orientation; Operating System Abstractions for Service-oriented Computing; and Services Specification, Composition, and Enactment.
Creating fonts is a complex task that requires expert knowledge in a variety of domains. Often, this knowledge is not held by a single person, but spread across a number of domain experts. A central concept needed for designing fonts is the glyph, an elemental symbol representing a readable character. Required domains include designing glyph shapes, engineering rules to combine glyphs for complex scripts and checking legibility. This process is most often iterative and requires communication in all directions. This report outlines a platform that aims to enhance the means of communication, describes our prototyping process, discusses complex font rendering and editing in a live environment and an approach to generate code based on a user’s live-edits.