Refine
Departments, institutes and facilities
- Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften (1089)
- Fachbereich Informatik (970)
- Fachbereich Angewandte Naturwissenschaften (577)
- Fachbereich Ingenieurwissenschaften und Kommunikation (512)
- Institut für funktionale Gen-Analytik (IFGA) (512)
- Fachbereich Sozialpolitik und Soziale Sicherung (359)
- Institut für Technik, Ressourcenschonung und Energieeffizienz (TREE) (352)
- Institut für Cyber Security & Privacy (ICSP) (281)
- Institute of Visual Computing (IVC) (272)
- Institut für Verbraucherinformatik (IVI) (217)
Document Type
- Article (1992)
- Conference Object (1646)
- Part of a Book (859)
- Book (monograph, edited volume) (447)
- Report (147)
- Contribution to a Periodical (115)
- Doctoral Thesis (106)
- Preprint (71)
- Lecture (62)
- Working Paper (52)
Year of publication
Has Fulltext
- no (5749) (remove)
Keywords
- Lehrbuch (88)
- Deutschland (30)
- Nachhaltigkeit (26)
- Controlling (25)
- Unternehmen (23)
- Management (20)
- Betriebswirtschaftslehre (17)
- Prozessmanagement (15)
- Sozialversicherung (15)
- Corporate Social Responsibility (14)
As competition for tourists becomes more global, understanding and accommodating the needs of international tourists, with their different cultural backgrounds, has become increasingly important. This study highlights the variations in tourist industry service--particularly as they relate to different cultures. Specifically, service failures experienced by Japanese and German tourists in the U.S. were categorized using the Critical Incident Technique (CIT). The results were compared with earlier studies of service failures experienced by American consumers in the tourist industry. The sample consists of 128 Japanese and 94 “Germanic” (German, Austrian, Swiss-German) respondents. The Japanese and German sample rated “Inappropriate employee behavior” most significant category of service failure. More than half of these respondents said that, because of the failure, they would avoid the offending U.S. business. This is a much stronger response than an American sample had reported in an earlier study. The implications for managers and researchers are discussed.
The study of locomotion in virtual environments is a diverse and rewarding research area. Yet, creating effective and intuitive locomotion techniques is challenging, especially when users cannot move around freely. While using handheld input devices for navigation may often be good enough, it does not match our natural experience of motion in the real world. Frequently, there are strong arguments for supporting body-centered self-motion cues as they may improve orientation and spatial judgments, and reduce motion sickness. Yet, how these cues can be introduced while the user is not moving around physically is not well understood. Actuated solutions such as motion platforms can be an option, but they are expensive and difficult to maintain. Alternatively, within this article we focus on the effect of upper-body tilt while users are seated, as previous work has indicated positive effects on self-motion perception. We report on two studies that investigated the effects of static and dynamic upper body leaning on perceived distances traveled and self-motion perception (vection). Static leaning (i.e., keeping a constant forward torso inclination) had a positive effect on self-motion, while dynamic torso leaning showed mixed results. We discuss these results and identify further steps necessary to design improved embodied locomotion control techniques that do not require actuated motion platforms.
The device (10) has a handrail (18) provided with an optical contactless monitoring device formed as an active sensor system, where the monitoring device is arranged in a region of a guide (14) of the handrail at a front base (16) of an escalator (12) or a moving pavement. The monitoring device has two transmission paths (28, 30) with wavelength bands that are different from each other, where one of the paths includes the handrail. Ratio or difference between signals of the paths is used for recognizing foreign bodies e.g. hands of adults and children.
Mobile Kundenbindung
(2015)
Since being introduced in the sixties and seventies, semi-implicit RosenbrockWanner (ROW) methods have become an important tool for the timeintegration of ODE and DAE problems. Over the years, these methods have been further developed in order to save computational effort by regarding approximations with respect to the given Jacobian [5], reduce effects of order reduction by introducing additional conditions [2, 4] or use advantages of partial explicit integration by considering underlying Runge-Kutta formulations [1]. As a consequence, there is a large number of different ROW-type schemes with characteristic properties for solving various problem formulations given in literature today.
Noncooperative Game Theory
(2016)
Der Nutzen von Prozessmanagement für die Effizienz und Effektivität der Organisation von Unternehmen ist vielfach bestätigt. Eine Studie der gfo-Gesellschaft für Organisation stellt fest, dass der Umsetzungsgrad der Prozessorganisation in Unternehmen dennoch mangelhaft ist. Es fehlt die Unterstützung der Leitung, die selbst noch überwiegend funktional organisiert ist.
We propose a high-performance GPU implementation of Ray Histogram Fusion (RHF), a denoising method for stochastic global illumination rendering. Based on the CPU implementation of the original algorithm, we present a naive GPU implementation and the necessary optimization steps. Eventually, we show that our optimizations increase the performance of RHF by two orders of magnitude when compared to the original CPU implementation and one order of magnitude compared to the naive GPU implementation. We show how the quality for identical rendering times relates to unfiltered path tracing and how much time is needed to achieve identical quality when compared to an unfiltered path traced result. Finally, we summarize our work and describe possible future applications and research based on this.
Rendering techniques for design evaluation and review or for visualizing large volume data often use computationally expensive ray-based methods. Due to the number of pixels and the amount of data, these methods often do not achieve interactive frame rates. A view direction based rendering technique renders the users central field of view in high quality whereas the surrounding is rendered with a level of detail approach depending on the distance to the users central field of view thus giving the opportunity to increase rendering efficiency. We propose a prototype implementation and evaluation of a focus-based rendering technique based on a hybrid ray tracing/sparse voxel octree rendering approach.
This presentation gives an overview of current research in the area of high quality rendering and visualization at the Institute of Visual Computing (IVC). Our research facility has some unique software and hardware installations of which we will describe a large, ultra- high resolution (72 megapixel) video wall in this presentation.
We present a system that combines voxel and polygonal representations into a single octree acceleration structure that can be used for ray tracing. Voxels are well-suited to create good level-of-detail for high-frequency models where polygonal simplifications usually fail due to the complex structure of the model. However, polygonal descriptions provide the higher visual fidelity. In addition, voxel representations often oversample the geometric domain especially for large triangles, whereas a few polygons can be tested for intersection more quickly.
A recent trend in interactive environments are large, ultra high resolution displays (LUHRDs). Compared to other large interactive installations, like the CAVE tm , LUHRDs are usually flat or (slightly) curved and have a significantly higher resolution, offering new research and application opportunities.
This tutorial provides information for researchers and engineers who plan to install and use a large ultra-high resolution display. We will give detailed information on the hardware and software of recently created and established installations and will show the variety of possible approaches. Also, we will talk about rendering software, rendering techniques and interaction for LUHRDs, as well as applications.
Traffic simulations for virtual environments are concerned with the behavior of individual traffic participants. The complexity of behavior in these simulations is often rather simple to abide by the constraints of processing resources. In sophisticated traffic simulations, the behavior of individual traffic participants is also modeled, but the focus lies on the overall behavior of the entire system, e.g. to identify possible bottle necks of traffic flow [8].
We present basho, a light weight and easily extendable virtual environment (VE) framework. Key benefits of this framework are independence of the scene element representation and the rendering API. The main goal was to make VE applications flexible without the need to change them, not only by being independent from input and output devices. As an example, with basho it is possible to switch from local illumination models to ray tracing by just replacing the renderer. Or to replace the graphical representation of the scene elements without the need to change the application. Furthermore it is possible to mix rendering technologies within a scene. This paper emphasises on the abstraction of the scene element representation.
At previous SIAS conferences, we presented a novel opto-electronic safety sensor system for skin detection at circular saws jointly developed with the Institute for Occupational Safety and Health of the German Social Accident Insurance (IFA). This work now presents the development results of our consecutive research on a prototype of a sensor system for more general production machine applications including robot workplaces. The system uses offthe shelf LEDs and photodiodes in combination with dedicated optics and a microcontroller system to implement a so-called spectral light curtain.
With the increasing average age of the population in many developed countries, afflictions like cardiovascular diseases have also increased. Exercising has a proven therapeutic effect on the cardiovascular system and can counteract this development. To avoid overstrain, determining an optimal training dose is crucial. In previous research, heart rate has been shown to be a good measure for cardiovascular behavior. Hence, prediction of the heart rate from work load information is an essential part in models used for training control. Most heart-rate-based models are described in the context of specific scenarios, and have been evaluated on unique datasets only. In this paper, we conduct a joint evaluation of existing approaches to model the cardiovascular system under a certain strain, and compare their predictive performance. For this purpose, we investigated some analytical models as well as some machine learning approaches in two scenarios: prediction over a certain time horizon into the future, and estimation of the relation between work load and heart rate over a whole training session.
Familienunternehmen tragen maßgeblich zur Bruttowertschöpfung der Bundesrepublik Deutschland bei: der Anteil von Familienunternehmen an allen Unternehmen der deutschen Volkswirtschaft am Ende des Jahres 2010 betrug etwa 78 % bei einem Anteil von 56 % an der Gesamtbeschäftigung. Bei allen Familienunternehmen kommt es früher oder später zu einem Wechsel der Leitung und des Eigentums. Die Unternehmensnachfolge ist unvermeidlicher Bestandteil des Lebenszyklus eines Familienunternehmens. Im Zeitraum von 2014 bis 2018 werden pro Jahr etwa 27.000 Nachfolgen in deutschen Familienunternehmen prognostiziert: dies bedeutet rein mathematisch im Durchschnitt etwa eine Nachfolge alle zwanzig Minuten.
Augmented Reality (AR) findet heutzutage sehr viele Anwendungsbereiche. Durch die Überlagerung von virtuellen Informationen mit der realen Umgebung eignet sich diese Technologie besonders für die Unterstützung der Benutzer bei technischen Wartungs- oder Reparaturvorgängen. Damit die virtuellen Daten korrekt mit der realen Welt überlagert werden, müssen Position und Orientierung der Kamera durch ein Trackingverfahren ermittelt werden. In dieser Arbeit wurde für diesen Zweck ein markerloses, modellbasiertes Trackingsystem implementiert. Während einer Initialisierungs-Phase wird die Kamerapose mithilfe von kalibrierten Referenzbildern, sogenannten Keyframes, bestimmt. In einer darauffolgenden Tracking-Phase wird das zu trackende Objekt weiterverfolgt. Evaluiert wurde das System an dem 1:1 Trainingsmodell des biologischen Forschungslabors Biolab, welches von der Europäischen Weltraumorganisation ESA zur Verfügung gestellt wurde.
信息时代的制造业及信息的价值 任守
(1995)
A framework of decision‐support systems in advanced manufacturing enterprises ‐ a systems view
(1997)
改进科技教育和科研工作--一位德国学者的几点看法
(1997)