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Studienverläufe von Studenten weichen nicht selten vom offiziell geplanten Curriculum ab. Für eine den Studienerfolg verbessernde Planung und Weiterentwicklung von Studiengängen und Curricula fehlen den Verantwortlichen häufig Erkenntnisse über tatsächliche sowie typischerweise erfolgreiche und weniger erfolgreiche Studienverlaufsmuster. Process-Mining-Techniken können helfen, mehr Transparenz bei der Auswertung von Studienverläufen zu schaffen und so die Erkennung typischer Studienverlaufsmuster, die Überprüfung der Übereinstimmung der konkreten Studienverläufe mit dem vorgegebenen Curriculum sowie eine zielgerechte Verbesserung des Curriculums zu unterstützen.
XPERSIF: a software integration framework & architecture for robotic learning by experimentation
(2008)
The integration of independently-developed applications into an efficient system, particularly in a distributed setting, is the core issue addressed in this work. Cooperation between researchers across various field boundaries in order to solve complex problems has become commonplace. Due to the multidisciplinary nature of such efforts, individual applications are developed independent of the integration process. The integration of individual applications into a fully-functioning architecture is a complex and multifaceted task. This thesis extends a component-based architecture, previously developed by the authors, to allow the integration of various software applications which are deployed in a distributed setting. The test bed for the framework is the EU project XPERO, the goal of which is robot learning by experimentation. The task at hand is the integration of the required applications, such as planning of experiments, perception of parametrized features, robot motion control and knowledge-based learning, into a coherent cognitive architecture. This allows a mobile robot to use the methods involved in experimentation in order to learn about its environment. To meet the challenge of developing this architecture within a distributed, heterogeneous environment, the authors specified, defined, developed, implemented and tested a component-based architecture called XPERSIF. The architecture comprises loosely-coupled, autonomous components that offer services through their well-defined interfaces and form a service-oriented architecture. The Ice middleware is used in the communication layer. Its deployment facilitates the necessary refactoring of concepts. One fully specified and detailed use case is the successful integration of the XPERSim simulator which constitutes one of the kernel components of XPERO.The results of this work demonstrate that the proposed architecture is robust and flexible, and can be successfully scaled to allow the complete integration of the necessary applications, thus enabling robot learning by experimentation. The design supports composability, thus allowing components to be grouped together in order to provide an aggregate service. Distributed simulation enabled real time tele-observation of the simulated experiment. Results show that incorporating the XPERSim simulator has substantially enhanced the speed of research and the information flow within the cognitive learning loop.
Vielfalt ist unser Angebot
(2014)
Der Fachbereich Sozialversicherung der Hochschule Bonn-Rhein-Sieg blickt auf zehn erfolgreiche Jahre zurück. Seit Gründung des Fachbereichs im Jahr 2003 arbeiten Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissenschaftler verschiedener Disziplinen auf dem Campus Hennef eng vernetzt im Untersuchungsfeld der Sozialversicherung.
Die Wahrnehmung des perzeptionellen Aufrecht (perceptual upright, PU) variiert in Abhängigkeit der Gewichtung verschiedener gravitationsbezogener und körperbasierter Merkmale zwischen Kontexten und aufgrund individueller Unterschiede. Ziel des Vorhabens war es, systematisch zu untersuchen, welche Zusammenhänge zwischen visuellen und gravitationsbedingten Merkmalen bestehen. Das Vorhaben baute auf vorangegangen Untersuchungen auf, deren Ergebnisse indizieren, dass eine Gravitation von ca. 0,15g notwendig ist, um effiziente Selbstorientierungsinformationen bereit zu stellen (Herpers et. al, 2015; Harris et. al, 2014).
In dem hier beschriebenen Vorhaben wurden nun gezielt künstliche Gravitationsbedingungen berücksichtigt, um die Gravitationsschwelle, ab der ein wahrnehmbarer Einfluss beobachtbar ist, genauer zu quantifizieren bzw. die oben genannte Hypothese zu bestätigen. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die zentripetale Kraft, die auf einer rotierenden Zentrifuge entlang der Längsachse des Körpers wirkt, genauso efektiv wie Stehen mit normaler Schwerkraft ist, um das Gefühl des perzeptionellen Aufrechts auszulösen. Die erzielten Daten deuten zudem darauf hin, dass ein Gravitationsfeld von mindestens 0,15 g notwendig ist, um eine efektive Orientierungsinformation für die Wahrnehmung von Aufrecht zu liefern. Dies entspricht in etwa der Gravitationskraft von 0,17 g, die auf dem Mond besteht. Für eine lineare Beschleunigung des Körpers liegt der vestibulare Schwellenwert bei etwa 0,1 m/s2 und somit liegt der Wert für die Situation auf dem Mond von 1,6 m/s2 deutlich über diesem Schwellenwert.
This work provides a short but technical introduction to the main building blocks of a blockchain. It argues that a blockchain is not a revolutionary technology but rather a clever combination of three fields: cryptography, decentralization and game theory. In addition, it summaries the differences between a public, private and federate blockchain model and the two prominent consensus mechanism Proof-of-Work (POW) and Proof-of-Stake (POS).
Population ageing and growing prevalence of disability have resulted in a growing need for personal care and assistance. The insufficient supply of personal care workers and the rising costs of long-term care have turned this phenomenon into a greater social concern. This has resulted in a growing interest in assistive technology in general, and assistive robots in particular, as a means of substituting or supplementing the care provided by humans, and as a means of increasing the independence and overall quality of life of persons with special needs. Although many assistive robots have been developed in research labs world-wide, very few are commercially available. One of the reasons for this, is the cost. One way of optimising cost is to develop solutions that address specific needs of users. As a precursor to this, it is important to identify gaps between what the users need and what the technology (assistive robots) currently provides. This information is obtained through technology mapping.
The current literature lacks a mapping between user needs and assistive robots, at the level of individual systems. The user needs are not expressed in uniform terminology across studies, which makes comparison of results difficult. In this research work, we have illustrated the technology mapping of assistive robots using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF). ICF provides standard terminology for expressing user needs in detail. Expressing the assistive functions of robots also in ICF terminology facilitates communication between different stakeholders (rehabilitation professionals, robotics researchers, etc.).
We also investigated existing taxonomies for assistive robots. It was observed that there is no widely accepted taxonomy for classifying assistive robots. However, there exists an international standard, ISO 9999, which classifies commercially available assistive products. The applicability of the latest revision of ISO 9999 standard for classifying mobility assistance robots has been studied. A partial classification of assistive robots based on ISO 9999 is suggested. The taxonomy and technology mapping are illustrated with the help of four robots that have the potential to provide mobility assistance. These are the SmartCane, the SmartWalker, MAid and Care-O-bot (R) 3. SmartCane, SmartWalker and MAid provide assistance by supporting physical movement. Care-O-bot (R) 3 provides assistance by reducing the need to move.
This paper describes the security mechanisms of several wireless building automation technologies, namely ZigBee, EnOcean, ZWave, KNX, FS20, and Home-Matic. It is shown that none of the technologies provides the necessary measure ofsecurity that should be expected in building automation systems. One of the conclusions drawn is that software embedded in systems that are build for a lifetime of twenty years or more needs to be updatable.
Recent work in image captioning and scene-segmentation has shown significant results in the context of scene-understanding. However, most of these developments have not been extrapolated to research areas such as robotics. In this work we review the current state-ofthe- art models, datasets and metrics in image captioning and scenesegmentation. We introduce an anomaly detection dataset for the purpose of robotic applications, and we present a deep learning architecture that describes and classifies anomalous situations. We report a METEOR score of 16.2 and a classification accuracy of 97 %.
Die sogenannte Regionalstudie trägt den Langtitel "Regionalwirtschaftliche Bedeutung der Hochschule Bonn-Rhein-Sieg und zukünftige Einbindung in die strategische Entwicklung der Region" und wurde 2010 erstellt und 2011 veröffentlicht. Sie analysiert die regionalwirtschaftliche Bedeutung der Hochschule primär unter quantitativen Aspekten und aus externer Sicht. Viele der daraus resultierenden Anregungen für die strategische Ausrichtung der Hochschule wurden bereits während der Feldphase im Hochschulentwicklungsplan aufgegriffen, konnten wegen der Parallelität aber nicht in der Studie Eingang finden.
Die Analyse zeigt, welchen Beitrag die Hochschule für die regionale Entwicklung leisten kann - im Einklang mit den Kommunen, der Gebietskörperschaften und der regional ansässigen Unternehmen.
Emotional communication is a key element of habilitation care of persons with dementia. It is, therefore, highly preferable for assistive robots that are used to supplement human care provided to persons with dementia, to possess the ability to recognize and respond to emotions expressed by those who are being cared-for. Facial expressions are one of the key modalities through which emotions are conveyed. This work focuses on computer vision-based recognition of facial expressions of emotions conveyed by the elderly.
Although there has been much work on automatic facial expression recognition, the algorithms have been experimentally validated primarily on young faces. The facial expressions on older faces has been totally excluded. This is due to the fact that the facial expression databases that were available and that have been used in facial expression recognition research so far do not contain images of facial expressions of people above the age of 65 years. To overcome this problem, we adopt a recently published database, namely, the FACES database, which was developed to address exactly the same problem in the area of human behavioural research. The FACES database contains 2052 images of six different facial expressions, with almost identical and systematic representation of the young, middle-aged and older age-groups.
In this work, we evaluate and compare the performance of two of the existing imagebased approaches for facial expression recognition, over a broad spectrum of age ranging from 19 to 80 years. The evaluated systems use Gabor filters and uniform local binary patterns (LBP) for feature extraction, and AdaBoost.MH with multi-threshold stump learner for expression classification. We have experimentally validated the hypotheses that facial expression recognition systems trained only on young faces perform poorly on middle-aged and older faces, and that such systems confuse ageing-related facial features on neutral faces with other expressions of emotions. We also identified that, among the three age-groups, the middle-aged group provides the best generalization performance across the entire age spectrum. The performance of the systems was also compared to the performance of humans in recognizing facial expressions of emotions. Some similarities were observed, such as, difficulty in recognizing the expressions on older faces, and difficulty in recognizing the expression of sadness.
The findings of our work establish the need for developing approaches for facial expression recognition that are robust to the effects of ageing on the face. The scientific results of our work can be used as a basis to guide future research in this direction.
Business process infrastructures like BPMS (Business Process Management Systems) and WfMS (Workflow Management Systems) traditionally focus on the automation of processes predefined at design time. This approach is well suited for routine tasks which are processed repeatedly and which are described by a predefined control flow. In contrast, knowledge-intensive work is more goal and data-driven and less control-flow oriented. Knowledge workers need the flexibility to decide dynamically at run-time and based on current context information on the best next process step to achieve a given goal. Obviously, in most practical scenarios, these decisions are complex and cannot be anticipated and modeled completely in a predefined process model. Therefore, adaptive and dynamic process management techniques are necessary to augment the control-flow oriented part of process management (which is still a need also for knowledge workers) with flexible, context-dependent, goaloriented support.
Rural areas often lack affordable broadband Internet connectivity, mainly due to the CAPEX and especially OPEX of traditional operator equipment [HEKN11]. This digital divide limits the access to knowledge, health care and other services for billions of people. Different approaches to close this gap were discussed in the last decade [SPNB08]. In most rural areas satellite bandwidth is expensive and cellular networks (3G,4G) as well as WiMAX suffer from the usually low population density making it hard to amortize the costs of a base station [SPNB08].
Recent advances in Natural Language Processing have substantially improved contextualized representations of language. However, the inclusion of factual knowledge, particularly in the biomedical domain, remains challenging. Hence, many Language Models (LMs) are extended by Knowledge Graphs (KGs), but most approaches require entity linking (i.e., explicit alignment between text and KG entities). Inspired by single-stream multimodal Transformers operating on text, image and video data, this thesis proposes the Sophisticated Transformer trained on biomedical text and Knowledge Graphs (STonKGs). STonKGs incorporates a novel multimodal architecture based on a cross encoder that uses the attention mechanism on a concatenation of input sequences derived from text and KG triples, respectively. Over 13 million so-called text-triple pairs, coming from PubMed and assembled using the Integrated Network and Dynamical Reasoning Assembler (INDRA), were used in an unsupervised pre-training procedure to learn representations of biomedical knowledge in STonKGs. By comparing STonKGs to an NLP- and a KG-baseline (operating on either text or KG data) on a benchmark consisting of eight fine-tuning tasks, the proposed knowledge integration method applied in STonKGs was empirically validated. Specifically, on tasks with a comparatively small dataset size and a larger number of classes, STonKGs resulted in considerable performance gains, beating the F1-score of the best baseline by up to 0.083. Both the source code as well as the code used to implement STonKGs are made publicly available so that the proposed method of this thesis can be extended to many other biomedical applications.
The work presented in this paper focuses on the comparison of well-known and new fault-diagnosis algorithms in the robot domain. The main challenge for fault diagnosis is to allow the robot to effectively cope not only with internal hardware and software faults but with external disturbances and errors from dynamic and complex environments as well. Based on a study of literature covering fault-diagnosis algorithms, I selected four of these methods based on both linear and non-linear models, analysed and implemented them in a mathematical robot-model, representing a four-wheels-OMNI robot. In experiments I tested the ability of the algorithms to detect and identify abnormal behaviour and to optimize the model parameters for the given training data. The final goal was to point out the strengths of each algorithm and to figure out which method would best suit the demands of fault diagnosis for a particular robot.
This thesis introduces and demonstrates a novel method for learning qualitative models of the world by an autonomous robot. The method makes possible generation of qualitative models that can be used for prediction as well as directing the experiments to improve the model. The qualitative models form the knowledge representation of the robot and consists of qualitative trees and non-deterministic finite automaton. An efficient exploration algorithm that lets the robot collect the most relevant learning samples is also introduced. To demonstrate the use of the methodology, representation and algorithm, two experiments are described. The first experiment is conducted using a mobile robot and a ball, where the robot observes the ball and learns the effect of its actions on the observed attributes of the world. The second experiment is conducted using a mobile robot and five boxes, two non-movable boxes and three movable boxes. The robot experiments actively with the objects and observes the changes in the attributes of the world. The main difference with the two experiments is that the first one tries to learn by observation while the second tries to learn by experimentation. In both experiments the robot learns qualitative models from its actions and observations. Although the primary objective of the robot is to improve itself by being able to predict the outcome of its actions, the models Learned were also used at each step of the learning process to direct the experiments so that the model converges to the final model as quickly as possible.
Human and robot tasks in household environments include actions such as carrying an object, cleaning a surface, etc. These tasks are performed by means of dexterous manipulation, and for humans, they are straightforward to accomplish. Moreover, humans perform these actions with reasonable accuracy and precision but with much less energy and stress on the actuators (muscles) than the robots do. The high agility in controlling their forces and motions is actually due to "laziness", i.e. humans exploit the existing natural forces and constraints to execute the tasks.
The above-mentioned properties of the human lazy strategy motivate us to relax the problem of controlling robot motions and forces, and solve it with the help of the environment. Therefore, in this work, we developed a lazy control strategy, i.e. task specification models and control architectures that relax several aspects of robot control by exploiting prior knowledge about the task and environment. The developed control strategy is realized in four different robotics use cases. In this work, the Popov-Vereshchagin hybrid dynamics solver is used as one of the building blocks in the proposed control architectures. An extension of the solver’s interface with the artificial Cartesian force and feed-forward joint torque task-drivers is proposed in this thesis.
To validate the proposed lazy control approach, an experimental evaluation was performed in a simulation environment and on a real robot platform.
Als Basis für Simulationen innerhalb virtueller Umgebungen werden meist unterliegende Semantiken benötigt. Im Fall von Verkehrssimulationen werden in der Regel definierte Verkehrsnetzwerke genutzt. Die Erstellung dieser Netzwerke wird meist per Hand durchgeführt, wodurch sie fehleranfällig ist und viel Zeit erfordert. Dieses Projekt wurde im Rahmen des AVeSi Projektes durchgeführt, in dem an der Entwicklung einer realistischen Verkehrssimulation für virtuelle Umgebung geforscht wird. Der im Projekt angestrebte Simulationsansatz basiert auf der Nutzung von zwei Komplexitätsebenen – einer mikroskopischen und einer mesoskopischen. Um einen Übergang zwischen den Simulationsebenen zu realisieren ist eine Verknüpfung der Verkehrsnetzwerke notwendig, was ebenfalls mit einem hohen Zeitaufwand verbunden ist. In diesem Bericht werden Modelle für Verkehrsnetzwerke beider Ebenen vorgestellt. Anschließend wird ein Ansatz beschrieben, der eine automatische Generierung und Verknüpfung von Verkehrsnetzwerken beider Modelle ermöglicht. Als Grundlage für die Generierung der Netzwerke dienen Daten im OpenDRIVE®-Format. Zur Evaluierung wurden wirklichkeitsgetreue OpenStreetMap-Daten, durch Verwendung einer Drittanbietersoftware, in OpenDRIVE®-Datensätze überführt. Es konnte nachgewiesen werden, dass es durch den Ansatz möglich ist, innerhalb weniger Minuten, große Verkehrsnetzwerke zu erzeugen, auf denen unmittelbar Simulationen ausgeführt werden können. Die Qualität der zur Evaluierung generierten Netzwerke reicht jedoch für Umgebungen, in denen ein hoher Realitätsgrad gefordert wird, nicht aus, was einen zusätzlichen Bearbeitungsschritt notwendig macht. Die Qualitätsprobleme konnten darauf zurückgeführt werden, dass der Detailgrad, der den Evaluierungsdaten zu Grunde liegenden OpenStreetMap-Daten, nicht hoch genug und der Überführungsprozess nicht ausreichend transparent ist.