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Earth's climate varies continuously across space and time, but humankind has witnessed only a small snapshot of its entire history, and instrumentally documented it for a mere 200 years. Our knowledge of past climate changes is therefore almost exclusively based on indirect proxy data, i.e. on indicators which are sensitive to changes in climatic variables and stored in environmental archives. Extracting the data from these archives allows retrieval of the information from earlier times. Obtaining accurate proxy information is a key means to test model predictions of the past climate, and only after such validation can the models be used to reliably forecast future changes in our warming world. The polar ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica are one major climate archive, which record information about local air temperatures by means of the isotopic composition of the water molecules embedded in the ice. However, this temperature proxy is, as any indirect climate data, not a perfect recorder of past climatic variations. Apart from local air temperatures, a multitude of other processes affect the mean and variability of the isotopic data, which hinders their direct interpretation in terms of climate variations. This applies especially to regions with little annual accumulation of snow, such as the Antarctic Plateau. While these areas in principle allow for the extraction of isotope records reaching far back in time, a strong corruption of the temperature signal originally encoded in the isotopic data of the snow is expected. This dissertation uses observational isotope data from Antarctica, focussing especially on the East Antarctic low-accumulation area around the Kohnen Station ice-core drilling site, together with statistical and physical methods, to improve our understanding of the spatial and temporal isotope variability across different scales, and thus to enhance the applicability of the proxy for estimating past temperature variability. The presented results lead to a quantitative explanation of the local-scale (1–500 m) spatial variability in the form of a statistical noise model, and reveal the main source of the temporal variability to be the mixture of a climatic seasonal cycle in temperature and the effect of diffusional smoothing acting on temporally uncorrelated noise. These findings put significant limits on the representativity of single isotope records in terms of local air temperature, and impact the interpretation of apparent cyclicalities in the records. Furthermore, to extend the analyses to larger scales, the timescale-dependency of observed Holocene isotope variability is studied. This offers a deeper understanding of the nature of the variations, and is crucial for unravelling the embedded true temperature variability over a wide range of timescales.
How can interactive devices connect with users in the most immediate and intimate way? This question has driven interactive computing for decades. Throughout the last decades, we witnessed how mobile devices moved computing into users’ pockets, and recently, wearables put computing in constant physical contact with the user’s skin. In both cases moving the devices closer to users allowed devices to sense more of the user, and thus act more personal. The main question that drives our research is: what is the next logical step?
Some researchers argue that the next generation of interactive devices will move past the user’s skin and be directly implanted inside the user’s body. This has already happened in that we have pacemakers, insulin pumps, etc. However, we argue that what we see is not devices moving towards the inside of the user’s body, but rather towards the body’s biological “interface” they need to address in order to perform their function.
To implement our vision, we created a set of devices that intentionally borrow parts of the user’s body for input and output, rather than adding more technology to the body.
In this dissertation we present one specific flavor of such devices, i.e., devices that borrow the user’s muscles. We engineered I/O devices that interact with the user by reading and controlling muscle activity. To achieve the latter, our devices are based on medical-grade signal generators and electrodes attached to the user’s skin that send electrical impulses to the user’s muscles; these impulses then cause the user’s muscles to contract.
While electrical muscle stimulation (EMS) devices have been used to regenerate lost motor functions in rehabilitation medicine since the 1960s, in this dissertation, we propose a new perspective: EMS as a means for creating interactive systems.
We start by presenting seven prototypes of interactive devices that we have created to illustrate several benefits of EMS. These devices form two main categories: (1) Devices that allow users eyes-free access to information by means of their proprioceptive sense, such as the value of a variable in a computer system, a tool, or a plot; (2) Devices that increase immersion in virtual reality by simulating large forces, such as wind, physical impact, or walls and heavy objects.
Then, we analyze the potential of EMS to build interactive systems that miniaturize well and discuss how they leverage our proprioceptive sense as an I/O modality. We proceed by laying out the benefits and disadvantages of both EMS and mechanical haptic devices, such as exoskeletons.
We conclude by sketching an outline for future research on EMS by listing open technical, ethical and philosophical questions that we left unanswered.
In a changing world facing several direct or indirect anthropogenic challenges the freshwater resources are endangered in quantity and quality. An excessive supply of nutrients, for example, can cause disproportional phytoplankton development and oxygen deficits in large rivers, leading to failure of the aims requested by the Water Framework Directive (WFD). Such problems can be observed in many European river catchments including the Elbe basin, and effective measures for improving water quality status are highly appreciated.
In water resources management and protection, modelling tools can help to understand the dominant nutrient processes and to identify the main sources of nutrient pollution in a watershed. They can be effective instruments for impact assessments investigating the effects of changing climate or socio-economic conditions on the status of surface water bodies, and for testing the usefulness of possible protection measures. Due to the high number of interrelated processes, ecohydrological model approaches containing water quality components are more complex than the pure hydrological ones, and their setup and calibration require more efforts. Such models, including the Soil and Water Integrated Model (SWIM), still need some further development and improvement.
Therefore, this cumulative dissertation focuses on two main objectives: 1) the approach-related objectives aiming in the SWIM model improvement and further development regarding nutrient (nitrogen and phosphorus) process description, and 2) the application-related objectives in meso- to large-scale Elbe river basins to support adaptive river basin management in view of possible future changes. The dissertation is based on five scientific papers published in international journals and dealing with these research questions.
Several adaptations were implemented in the model code to improve the representation of nutrient processes including a simple wetland approach, an extended by ammonium nitrogen cycle in the soils, as well as a detailed in-stream module, simulating algal growth, nutrient transformation processes and oxygen conditions in the river reaches, mainly driven by water temperature and light. Although this new approaches created a highly complex ecohydrological model with a large number of additional calibration parameters and rising uncertainty, the calibration and validation of the SWIM model enhanced by the new approaches in selected subcatchment and the entire Elbe river basin delivered satisfactory to good model results in terms of criteria of fit. Thus, the calibrated and validated model provided a sound base for the assessment of possible future changes and impacts in climate, land use and management in the Elbe river (sub)basin(s).
The new enhanced modelling approach improved the applicability of the SWIM model for the WFD related research questions, where the ability to consider biological water quality components (such as phytoplankton) is important. It additionally enhanced its ability to simulate the behaviour of nutrients coming mainly from point sources (e.g. phosphate phosphorus). Scenario results can be used by decision makers and stakeholders to find and understand future challenges and possible adaptation measures in the Elbe river basin.
Veränderungen im thermalen Regime des Permafrosts verursachen Störungen der Erdoberfläche. Diese Veränderungen werden durch die in der Arktis seit Jahrzehnten ansteigenden Temperaturen verstärkt. Thermokarst ist ein Prozess, welcher die Erdoberfläche durch Schmelzen von Grundeis, oder Auftauen von Permafrost absacken lässt, wodurch charakteristische Landformen entstehen. Thermokarst ist vor allem entlang von Hängen weit verbreitet und die Anzahl der damit verbundenen Landformen in der Arktis steigt stetig an. Dieser Prozess mobilisiert große Mengen an Material, welche in Richtung Meer transportiert oder entlang von Hängen akkumuliert werden. Während entlang von Hängen auftretender Thermokarst terrestrische sowie aquatische Ökosysteme stark verändert, ist dessen Einfluss auf regionaler Skala zurzeit noch Gegenstand der Forschung.
In dieser Arbeit quantifizieren wir die Auswirkungen von Thermokarstprozessen entlang von Hängen auf die umliegenden Ökosysteme der küstennahen Täler und Nahküstenbereiche entlang der Yukon Küste in Kanada. Mittels überwachtem maschinellen Lernen haben wir geomorphische Faktoren identifiziert, welche die Entwicklung von retrogressiven Auftaurutschungen (RTS) begünstigen. RTS sind eine Erscheinungsform von Thermokarst entlang von Hängen. Die Küstengeomorphologie, sowie der Grundeistyp und -inhalt sind die wesentlichen bestimmenden Faktoren für das Auftreten von RTS. Wir haben Luftbildaufnahmen und Satellitenbilder genutzt, um die Evolution von RTS im Zeitraum von 1952 bis 2011 zu verfolgen. Während dieser Zeit ist die Anzahl und Ausdehnung von RTS linear angestiegen. Wir zeigen, dass 56% der RTS welche entlang der Küste in 2011 identifiziert wurden, 16.6 × 106 m3 an Material erodiert haben. Hiervon wurden 45% durch Küstenprozesse entlang der Küste transportiert. RTS tragen wesentlich zu dem Kohlenstoff-Budget des Nahküstenbereiches bei: 17% der in 2011 identifizierten RTS, haben 0.6% des organischen Kohlenstoffes transportiert, welcher durch Küstenerosion entlang der Yukon Küste jährlich freigesetzt wird. Um den Einfluss von Thermokarst entlang von Hängen auf das terrestrische Ökosystem zu beurteilen, haben wir die räumliche Verteilung von organischem Bodenkohlenstoff und Stickstoff (SOC, TN) entlang von Hangprofilen in drei arktischen Tälern analysiert.Wir weisen auf eine hohe räumliche Variabilität in der Verteilung von SOC und TN hin, welche auf komplexe Bodenprozesse zurückzuführen ist, welche entlang von Hängen auftreten. Thermokarst entlang von Hängen hat einen großen Einfluss auf die Degradierung von organischem Material und die Speicherung von SOC und TN.
Die Folgen einer lebensmittelbedingten Erkrankung sind zum Teil gravierend, insbesondere für Kinder und immunsupprimierte Menschen. Hierbei gehören Salmonella und Campylobacter zu den häufigsten Erregern, die verantwortlich für gastrointestinale Erkrankungen in Deutschland sind. Trotz umfassender Maßnahmen der EU zur Prävention und Bekämpfung von Salmonellen in Geflügelbeständen und der Lebensmittel-Industrie, wird von einem stagnierenden Trend von Infektionszahlen berichtet. Zoonose-Erreger wie Salmonellen können über Nutztiere in die Nahrungskette des Menschen gelangen, wodurch sich Infektionsherde schnell ausbreiten können. Dabei sind bestehende Präventionsstrategien für Geflügel vorhanden, die aber nicht auf den Menschen übertragbar sind. Folglich sind Diagnostik und Prävention in der Lebensmittelindustrie essentiell. Deshalb besteht ein hoher Bedarf für spezifische, sensitive und zuverlässige Nachweismethoden, die eine Point-of-care Diagnostik gewährleisten. Durch ein wachsendes Verständnis der wirtsspezifischen Faktoren von S. enterica Serovaren kann die Entwicklung sowohl neuartiger diagnostischer Methoden, als auch neuartiger Therapien und Impfstoffe maßgeblich vorangetrieben werden.
Infolgedessen wurde in dieser Arbeit ein infektionsähnliches in vitro Modell für S. Enteritidis etabliert und darauf basierend eine umfassende Untersuchung zur Identifizierung neuer Zielstrukturen für den Erreger durchgeführt. Während einer Salmonellen-Infektion ist die erste zelluläre Barriere im Wirt die Epithelschicht. Dementsprechend wurde eine humane Zelllinie (CaCo 2, Darmepithel) für die Pathogen-Wirt-Studie ausgewählt. Das Salmonellen-Transkriptom und morphologische Eigenschaften der Epithelzellen wurden in verschiedenen Phasen der Salmonellen-Infektion untersucht und mit bereits gut beschriebenen Virulenzfaktoren und Beobachtungen in Bezug gesetzt. Durch dieses Infektionsmodell konnte ein spezifischer Phänotyp für die intrazellulären Salmonellen in den Epithelzellen nachgewiesen werden. Zudem wurde aufgezeigt, dass bereits die Kultivierung in Flüssigmedium einen invasionsaktiven Zustand der Salmonellen erzeugt. Allerdings wurde durch die Kokultivierung mit Epithelzellen eine zusätzliche Expression relevanter Gene induziert, um eine effiziente Adhäsion und Transmembran-Transport zu gewährleisten. Letzterer ist charakteristisch für die intrazelluläre Limitierung von Nährstoffen und prägt den infektionsrelevanten Status. Unter Berücksichtigung dieser Faktoren ergab sich ein Phänotyp, der eindeutig Mechanismen zur Wirtsadaptation und möglicherweise auch Pathogenese aufzeigt. Die intrazellulären Bakterien müssen vom Wirt separiert werden, was ein wesentlicher Schritt für Pathogen-bestimmende Analysen ist. Hierbei wurde mithilfe einer Detergenz-basierten Lyse der eukaryotischen Zellmembran und differentieller Zentrifugation, der eukaryotische Eintrag minimal gehalten. Unter Verwendung der Virulenz-adaptierten Salmonellen wurden Untersuchungen in Hinblick auf die Identifizierung neuer Zielstrukturen für S. Enteritidis durchgeführt. Mithilfe eines immunologischen Screenings wurden neue potentielle Antigene entdeckt. Zu diesem Zweck wurden bakterielle cDNA-basierte Expressionsbibliotheken hergestellt, die durch eine vereinfachte Microarray-Anwendung ein Hochdurchsatzscreening von Proteinen als potentielle Binder ermöglichen. Folglich konnten neue unbeschriebene Proteine identifiziert werden, die sich durch eine Salmonella-Spezifität oder Membranständigkeit auszeichnen. Ebenso wurde ein Vergleich der im Screening identifizierten Proteine mit der Regulation der kodierenden Gene im infektionsähnlichen Modell durchgeführt. Dabei wurde deutlich, dass die Häufigkeit von Transkripten einen Einfluss auf die Verfügbarkeit in der cDNA-Bibliothek und folglich auch auf die Expressionsbibliothek nimmt. Angesichts eines Ungleichgewichts zwischen der Gesamtzahl protein-kodierender Gene in S. Enteritidis zu möglichen Klonen, die während des Microarray-Screenings untersucht werden können, besteht der Bedarf einer Anreicherung von Proteinen in der Expressionsbibliothek. Das infektionsähnliche Modell zeigte, dass nicht nur Virulenz-assoziierte, sondern auch Stress- und Metabolismus-relevante Gene hochreguliert werden. Durch die Konstruktion dieser spezifischen cDNA-Bibliotheken ist die Erkennung von charakteristischen molekularen Markern gegeben.
Weiterhin wurden anhand der Transkriptomanalyse spezifisch hochregulierte Gene identifiziert, die relevant für das intrazelluläre Überleben von S. Enteritidis in humanen Epithelzellen sind. Hiervon wurden drei Gene näher untersucht, indem ihr Einfluss im infektionsähnlichen Modell mittels entsprechender Gen-Knockout-Stämme analysiert wurde. Dabei wurde für eine dieser Mutanten ein reduziertes Wachstum in der späten intrazellulären Phase nachgewiesen. Weiterführende in vitro Analysen sind für die Charakterisierung des Knockout-Stamms notwendig, um den Einsatz als potenzielles Therapeutikum zu verifizieren.
Zusammenfassend wurde ein in vitro Infektionsmodell für S. Enteritidis etabliert, wodurch neue Zielstrukturen des Erregers identifiziert wurden. Diese sind für diagnostische oder therapeutische Anwendungen interessant. Das Modell lässt sich ebenso für andere intrazelluläre Pathogene übertragen und gewährleistet eine zuverlässige Identifizierung von potentiellen Antigenen.
Identifizierung früher epigenetischer Veränderungen, die zur Ausbildung einer Fettleber beitragen
(2018)
Understanding how humans move their eyes is an important part for understanding the functioning of the visual system. Analyzing eye movements from observations of natural scenes on a computer screen is a step to understand human visual behavior in the real world. When analyzing eye-movement data from scene-viewing experiments, the impor- tant questions are where (fixation locations), how long (fixation durations) and when (ordering of fixations) participants fixate on an image. By answering these questions, computational models can be developed which predict human scanpaths. Models serve as a tool to understand the underlying cognitive processes while observing an image, especially the allocation of visual attention.
The goal of this thesis is to provide new contributions to characterize and model human scanpaths on natural scenes. The results from this thesis will help to understand and describe certain systematic eye-movement tendencies, which are mostly independent of the image. One eye-movement tendency I focus on throughout this thesis is the tendency to fixate more in the center of an image than on the outer parts, called the central fixation bias. Another tendency, which I will investigate thoroughly, is the characteristic distribution of angles between successive eye movements.
The results serve to evaluate and improve a previously published model of scanpath generation from our laboratory, the SceneWalk model. Overall, six experiments were conducted for this thesis which led to the following five core results:
i) A spatial inhibition of return can be found in scene-viewing data. This means that locations which have already been fixated are afterwards avoided for a certain time interval (Chapter 2).
ii) The initial fixation position when observing an image has a long-lasting influence of up to five seconds on further scanpath progression (Chapter 2 & 3).
iii) The often described central fixation bias on images depends strongly on the duration of the initial fixation. Long-lasting initial fixations lead to a weaker central fixation bias than short fixations (Chapter 2 & 3).
iv) Human observers adjust their basic eye-movement parameters, like fixation dura- tions and saccade amplitudes, to the visual properties of a target they look for in visual search (Chapter 4).
v) The angle between two adjacent saccades is an indicator for the selectivity of the upcoming saccade target (Chapter 4).
All results emphasize the importance of systematic behavioral eye-movement tenden- cies and dynamic aspects of human scanpaths in scene viewing.
Human actuation
(2018)
Ever since the conception of the virtual reality headset in 1968, many researchers have argued that the next step in virtual reality is to allow users to not only see and hear, but also feel virtual worlds. One approach is to use mechanical equipment to provide haptic feedback, e.g., robotic arms, exoskeletons and motion platforms. However, the size and the weight of such mechanical equipment tends to be proportional to its target’s size and weight, i.e., providing human-scale haptic feedback requires human-scale equipment, often restricting them to arcades and lab environments.
The key idea behind this dissertation is to bypass mechanical equipment by instead leveraging human muscle power. We thus create software systems that orchestrate humans in doing such mechanical labor—this is what we call human actuation. A potential benefit of such systems is that humans are more generic, flexible, and versatile than machines. This brings a wide range of haptic feedback to modern virtual reality systems.
We start with a proof-of-concept system—Haptic Turk, focusing on delivering motion experiences just like a motion platform. All Haptic Turk setups consist of a user who is supported by one or more human actuators. The user enjoys an interactive motion simulation such as a hang glider experience, but the motion is generated by those human actuators who manually lift, tilt, and push the user’s limbs or torso. To get the timing and force right, timed motion instructions in a format familiar from rhythm games are generated by the system.
Next, we extend the concept of human actuation from 3-DoF to 6-DoF virtual reality where users have the freedom to walk around. TurkDeck tackles this problem by orchestrating a group of human actuators to reconfigure a set of passive props on the fly while the user is progressing in the virtual environment. TurkDeck schedules human actuators by their distances from the user, and instructs them to reconfigure the props to the right place on the right time using laser projection and voice output.
Our studies in Haptic Turk and TurkDeck showed that human actuators enjoyed the experience but not as much as users. To eliminate the need of dedicated human actuators, Mutual Turk makes everyone a user by exchanging mechanical actuation between two or more users. Mutual Turk’s main functionality is that it orchestrates the users so as to actuate props at just the right moment and with just the right force to produce the correct feedback in each other's experience.
Finally, we further eliminate the need of another user, making human actuation applicable to single-user experiences. iTurk makes the user constantly reconfigure and animate otherwise passive props. This allows iTurk to provide virtual worlds with constantly varying or even animated haptic effects, even though the only animate entity present in the system is the user. Our demo experience features one example each of iTurk’s two main types of props, i.e., reconfigurable props (the foldable board from TurkDeck) and animated props (the pendulum).
We conclude this dissertation by summarizing the findings of our explorations and pointing out future directions. We discuss the development of human actuation compare to traditional machine actuation, the possibility of combining human and machine actuators and interaction models that involve more human actuators.
The concept of hydrologic connectivity summarizes all flow processes that link separate regions of a landscape. As such, it is a central theme in the field of catchment hydrology, with influence on neighboring disciplines such as ecology and geomorphology. It is widely acknowledged to be an important key in understanding the response behavior of a catchment and has at the same time inspired research on internal processes over a broad range of scales. From this process-hydrological point of view, hydrological connectivity is the conceptual framework to link local observations across space and scales.
This is the context in which the four studies this thesis comprises of were conducted. The focus was on structures and their spatial organization as important control on preferential subsurface flow. Each experiment covered a part of the conceptualized flow path from hillslopes to the stream: soil profile, hillslope, riparian zone, and stream.
For each study site, the most characteristic structures of the investigated domain and scale, such as slope deposits and peat layers were identified based on preliminary or previous investigations or literature reviews. Additionally, further structural data was collected and topographical analyses were carried out. Flow processes were observed either based on response observations (soil moisture changes or discharge patterns) or direct measurement (advective heat transport). Based on these data, the flow-relevance of the characteristic structures was evaluated, especially with regard to hillslope to stream connectivity.
Results of the four studies revealed a clear relationship between characteristic spatial structures and the hydrological behavior of the catchment. Especially the spatial distribution of structures throughout the study domain and their interconnectedness were crucial for the establishment of preferential flow paths and their relevance for large-scale processes. Plot and hillslope-scale irrigation experiments showed that the macropores of a heterogeneous, skeletal soil enabled preferential flow paths at the scale of centimeters through the otherwise unsaturated soil. These flow paths connected throughout the soil column and across the hillslope and facilitated substantial amounts of vertical and lateral flow through periglacial slope deposits.
In the riparian zone of the same headwater catchment, the connectivity between hillslopes and stream was controlled by topography and the dualism between characteristic subsurface structures and the geomorphological heterogeneity of the stream channel. At the small scale (1 m to 10 m) highest gains always occurred at steps along the longitudinal streambed profile, which also controlled discharge patterns at the large scale (100 m) during base flow conditions (number of steps per section). During medium and high flow conditions, however, the impact of topography and parafluvial flow through riparian zone structures prevailed and dominated the large-scale response patterns.
In the streambed of a lowland river, low permeability peat layers affected the connectivity between surface water and groundwater, but also between surface water and the hyporheic zone. The crucial factor was not the permeability of the streambed itself, but rather the spatial arrangement of flow-impeding peat layers, causing increased vertical flow through narrow “windows” in contrast to predominantly lateral flow in extended areas of high hydraulic conductivity sediments.
These results show that the spatial organization of structures was an important control for hydrological processes at all scales and study areas. In a final step, the observations from different scales and catchment elements were put in relation and compared. The main focus was on the theoretical analysis of the scale hierarchies of structures and processes and the direction of causal dependencies in this context. Based on the resulting hierarchical structure, a conceptual framework was developed which is capable of representing the system’s complexity while allowing for adequate simplifications.
The resulting concept of the parabolic scale series is based on the insight that flow processes in the terrestrial part of the catchment (soil and hillslopes) converge. This means that small-scale processes assemble and form large-scale processes and responses. Processes in the riparian zone and the streambed, however, are not well represented by the idea of convergence. Here, the large-scale catchment signal arrives and is modified by structures in the riparian zone, stream morphology, and the small-scale interactions between surface water and groundwater. Flow paths diverge and processes can better be represented by proceeding from large scales to smaller ones. The catchment-scale representation of processes and structures is thus the conceptual link between terrestrial hillslope processes and processes in the riparian corridor.
The rapid development and integration of Information Technologies over the last decades influenced all areas of our life, including the business world. Yet not only the modern enterprises become digitalised, but also security and criminal threats move into the digital sphere. To withstand these threats, modern companies must be aware of all activities within their computer networks.
The keystone for such continuous security monitoring is a Security Information and Event Management (SIEM) system that collects and processes all security-related log messages from the entire enterprise network. However, digital transformations and technologies, such as network virtualisation and widespread usage of mobile communications, lead to a constantly increasing number of monitored devices and systems. As a result, the amount of data that has to be processed by a SIEM system is increasing rapidly. Besides that, in-depth security analysis of the captured data requires the application of rather sophisticated outlier detection algorithms that have a high computational complexity. Existing outlier detection methods often suffer from performance issues and are not directly applicable for high-speed and high-volume analysis of heterogeneous security-related events, which becomes a major challenge for modern SIEM systems nowadays.
This thesis provides a number of solutions for the mentioned challenges. First, it proposes a new SIEM system architecture for high-speed processing of security events, implementing parallel, in-memory and in-database processing principles. The proposed architecture also utilises the most efficient log format for high-speed data normalisation. Next, the thesis offers several novel high-speed outlier detection methods, including generic Hybrid Outlier Detection that can efficiently be used for Big Data analysis. Finally, the special User Behaviour Outlier Detection is proposed for better threat detection and analysis of particular user behaviour cases.
The proposed architecture and methods were evaluated in terms of both performance and accuracy, as well as compared with classical architecture and existing algorithms. These evaluations were performed on multiple data sets, including simulated data, well-known public intrusion detection data set, and real data from the large multinational enterprise. The evaluation results have proved the high performance and efficacy of the developed methods.
All concepts proposed in this thesis were integrated into the prototype of the SIEM system, capable of high-speed analysis of Big Security Data, which makes this integrated SIEM platform highly relevant for modern enterprise security applications.
Heinrich Loewe
(2018)
Die zionistische Geschichte Berlins ist zweifellos mit den Biographien einer Vielzahl von Aktivistinnen und Aktivisten verknüpft, die sich vom ausgehenden 19. Jahrhundert an selbstorganisierten. Heinrich Loewe, den Barbara Schäfer zum „Paradebeispiel einer ganzen Epoche“ erklärte, spielte im Zuge der zionistischen ‚Aneignung‘ der Großstadt zweifelsohne eine entscheidende Rolle. Auf seinem Grabstein auf dem Alten Friedhof in Tel Aviv ist zurecht eingraviert: „Einer unter den Gründern der zionistischen Bewegung“.
Loewe – geboren in Wanzleben, Berliner seit 1933 – war um die Jahrhundertwende an zahlreichen zionistischen Vereinsgründungen beteiligt und viele Jahre als Journalist und Chefredakteur tätig. Früh unternahm er mehrmonatige Reisen nach Palästina, war Delegierter (nicht nur) auf dem 1. Zionistenkongress, später sogar Referent für „Palästina-Kulturfragen“ im 1907 in Berlin eröffneten Zentralbüro der Zionistischen Weltorganisation. Mit der Machtübernahme der Nationalsozialisten 1933 endete Loewes langjährige Tätigkeit als Bibliothekar der Berliner Universitätsbibliothek und er emigrierte mit seiner Familie nach Tel Aviv. Zu diesem Zeitpunkt blickte er auf einen 30 Jahre andauernden Einsatz für den Aufbau einer jüdischen Nationalbibliothek in Jerusalem zurück. Er wäre beinahe ihr erster Direktor geworden.
Basierend auf umfangreichem Material aus israelischen und deutschen Archiven sowie einem großen Korpus weiterer zeitgenössischer Quellen untersucht Frank Schlöffels Buch am Beispiel der Biographie Heinrich Loewes soziale und kulturelle Verflechtungsprozesse. Häufig von konkreten raum-zeitlichen Settings ausgehend – einem Ort etwa wie der Bibliothek oder der Redaktion –, richtet er einerseits den Blick auf das in diesen Kontexten entstehende Wissen, anderseits auf die sich knüpfenden Beziehungen zwischen Orten und zwischen Menschen, Gegenständen und Ideen.
Die Arbeit widmet sich den Haushaltssperren auf den verschiedenen Ebenen und untersucht, ob ein einheitliches Instrument der Haushaltssperre im deutschen Recht existiert, oder ob sich hinter dem Begriff der Haushaltssperre verschiedene haushaltsrechtliche Maßnahmen verbergen. Dazu werden auf verfassungsrechtlicher Ebene der Aspekt der Gewaltenteilung gemäß Art. 20 II 2 GG sowie die kommunale Selbstverwaltungsgarantie des Art. 28 II GG betrachtet. Auf Bundes-, Landes- und kommunaler Ebene werden u.a. Sperrvermerke, Globale Minderausgaben, haushaltswirtschaftliche Sperren sowie Bewirtschaftungssperren eingehend dargestellt und erörtert. Ergänzend werden Aspekte wie weitere Instrumente zur Kontrolle des Haushalts und Rechtsschutz gegen Haushaltssperren dargestellt und Regelungsvorschläge unterbreitet. Im Fazit wird festgestellt, dass »Haushaltssperren« zu komplex und unterschiedlich sind, um ein einheitliches Institut der Haushaltssperre darstellen zu können.
The prediction of the ground shaking that can occur at a site of interest due to an earthquake is crucial in any seismic hazard analysis. Usually, empirically derived ground-motion prediction equations (GMPEs) are employed within a logic-tree framework to account for this step. This is, however, challenging if the area under consideration has only low seismicity and lacks enough recordings to develop a region-specific GMPE. It is then usual practice to adapt GMPEs from data-rich regions (host area) to the area with insufficient ground-motion recordings (target area). Host GMPEs must be adjusted in such a way that they will capture the specific ground-motion characteristics of the target area. In order to do so, seismological parameters of the target region have to be provided as, for example, the site-specific attenuation factor kappa0. This is again an intricate task if data amount is too sparse to derive these parameters.
In this thesis, I explore methods that can facilitate the selection of non-endemic GMPEs in a logic-tree analysis or their adjustment to a data-poor region. I follow two different strategies towards this goal.
The first approach addresses the setup of a ground-motion logic tree if no indigenous GMPE is available. In particular, I propose a method to derive an optimized backbone model that captures the median ground-motion characteristics in the region of interest. This is done by aggregating several foreign GMPEs as weighted components of a mixture model in which the weights are inferred from observed data. The approach is applied to Northern Chile, a region for which no indigenous GMPE existed at the time of the study. Mixture models are derived for interface and intraslab type events using eight subduction zone GMPEs originating from different parts of the world. The derived mixtures provide satisfying results in terms of average residuals and average sample log-likelihoods. They outperform all individual non-endemic GMPEs and are comparable to a regression model that was specifically derived for that area.
The second approach is concerned with the derivation of the site-specific attenuation factor kappa0. kappa0 is one of the key parameters in host-to-target adjustments of GMPEs but is hard to derive if data amount is sparse. I explore methods to estimate kappa0 from ambient seismic noise. Seismic noise is, in contrast to earthquake recordings, continuously available. The rapidly emerging field of seismic interferometry gives the possibility to infer velocity and attenuation information from the cross-correlation or deconvolution of long noise recordings. The extraction of attenuation parameters from diffuse wavefields is, however, not straightforward especially not for frequencies above 1 Hz and at shallow depth. In this thesis, I show the results of two studies. In the first one, data of a small-scale array experiment in Greece are used to derive Love wave quality factors in
the frequency range 1-4 Hz. In a second study, frequency dependent quality factors of S-waves (5-15 Hz) are estimated by deconvolving noise recorded in a borehole and at a co-located surface station in West Bohemia/Vogtland. These two studies can be seen as preliminary steps towards the estimation of kappa0 from seismic noise.