Fachbereich Informatik
Refine
H-BRS Bibliography
- yes (62)
Departments, institutes and facilities
Document Type
- Master's Thesis (37)
- Bachelor Thesis (19)
- Report (4)
- Diploma Thesis (1)
- Study Thesis (1)
Year of publication
Keywords
- Emergency support system (2)
- Mobile sensors (2)
- Robotik (2)
- chemoCR (2)
- 0-1-Integer-Problem (1)
- 3D-Laserscanner (1)
- 3D-Punktwolke (1)
- 3D-Scanner (1)
- ASAG (1)
- Active Learning (1)
- Alize (1)
- Augmented Reality (1)
- Automation (1)
- Batch Normalization (1)
- Bildverarbeitung (1)
- Bounding box explanations (1)
- Chatbot (1)
- Classification explanations (1)
- Computer Game (1)
- Computer Vision (1)
- Conversational Search (1)
- Correlation (1)
- Datenbank (1)
- Directed Acyclic Graph (1)
- Distributed Systems (1)
- Domänen spezifische Sprache (1)
- Echtzeit-Tracking (1)
- Electronic Data Capture (EDC) (1)
- Expertensystem (1)
- Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI) (1)
- Flussnetz (1)
- Gnu Linear Programming Kit (1)
- Gradient-based explanation methods (1)
- Graphentheorie (1)
- Hibernate (1)
- Human Muscle (1)
- ICP (1)
- Information Retrieval (1)
- Interactive visualization (1)
- JBoss Drools (1)
- Java (1)
- Klassische Suchverfahren (1)
- KnowledgeFinder (1)
- Kollaboration (1)
- Kombinatorische Optimierung (1)
- Konfiguration (1)
- LAMA (1)
- LDA (1)
- LP-Heuristik (1)
- Labordaten (1)
- Lagerlogistik (1)
- LibAMA (1)
- Lineare Programmierung (1)
- Löser (1)
- Markush (1)
- Maximalflussproblem (1)
- Minimaler Schnitt (1)
- Motivation System (1)
- Multi-object visualization (1)
- NP-Vollständigkeit (1)
- Nachbarschaftsanalyse (1)
- OGC sensor observation service (1)
- OGS sensor observation service (1)
- OSGi (1)
- Object detectors (1)
- Operation Research (1)
- Optimierungsproblem (1)
- PLDA (1)
- Path-Packing (1)
- Quantitative analysis of explanations (1)
- Query method (1)
- RANSAC (1)
- RCE (1)
- REDCap (1)
- Random forest (1)
- Robotics (1)
- Rubrics (1)
- Rucksackproblem (1)
- SELU (1)
- SLAM (1)
- Saliency maps (1)
- Sandbox (1)
- Sanity checks for explaining detectors (1)
- Segmentierung (1)
- Semantische Suche (1)
- Semantische Technologien (1)
- Sensor web enablement (1)
- Short answer grading (1)
- Software testing (1)
- Speaker identification (1)
- Split-Screen (1)
- UAV (1)
- Virtuelle Realität (1)
- Wissenrepräsentation (1)
- YOLO v3 (1)
- bearing angle (1)
- binary classification (1)
- context free grammar (1)
- deep learning (1)
- domain specific language (1)
- extSMILES (1)
- external faults (1)
- i-vectors (1)
- laser scanner (1)
- lineares Gleichungssystem (1)
- mobile manipulators (1)
- object detection (1)
- optical flow (1)
- patent search (1)
- quadrotor (1)
- structure reconstruction (1)
- Öffentliche Verwaltung (1)
In service robotics, tasks without the involvement of objects are barely applicable, like in searching, fetching or delivering tasks. Service robots are supposed to capture efficiently object related information in real world scenes while for instance considering clutter and noise, and also being flexible and scalable to memorize a large set of objects. Besides object perception tasks like object recognition where the object’s identity is analyzed, object categorization is an important visual object perception cue that associates unknown object instances based on their e.g. appearance or shape to a corresponding category. We present a pipeline from the detection of object candidates in a domestic scene over the description to the final shape categorization of detected candidates. In order to detect object related information in cluttered domestic environments an object detection method is proposed that copes with multiple plane and object occurrences like in cluttered scenes with shelves. Further a surface reconstruction method based on Growing Neural Gas (GNG) in combination with a shape distribution-based descriptor is proposed to reflect shape characteristics of object candidates. Beneficial properties provided by the GNG such as smoothing and denoising effects support a stable description of the object candidates which also leads towards a more stable learning of categories. Based on the presented descriptor a dictionary approach combined with a supervised shape learner is presented to learn prediction models of shape categories.
Experimental results, of different shapes related to domestically appearing object shape categories such as cup, can, box, bottle, bowl, plate and ball, are shown. A classification accuracy of about 90% and a sequential execution time of lesser than two seconds for the categorization of an unknown object is achieved which proves the reasonableness of the proposed system design. Additional results are shown towards object tracking and false positive handling to enhance the robustness of the categorization. Also an initial approach towards incremental shape category learning is proposed that learns a new category based on the set of previously learned shape categories.
The objective of this thesis is to implement a computer game based motivation system for maximal strength testing on the Biodex System 3 Isokinetic Dynamometer. The prototype game has been designed to improve the peak torque produced in an isometric knee extensor strength test. An extensive analysis is performed on a torque data set from a previous study. The torque responses for five second long maximal voluntary contractions of the knee extensor are analyzed to understand torque response characteristics of different subjects. The parameters identifed in the data analysis are used in the implementation of the 'Shark and School of Fish' game. The behavior of the game for different torque responses is analyzed on a different torque data set from the previous study. The evaluation shows that the game rewards and motivates continuously over a repetition to reach the peak torque value. The evaluation also shows that the game rewards the user more if he overcomes a baseline torque value within the first second and then gradually increase the torque to reach peak torque.
In the eld of accessing and visualization mobile sensors and their recorded data, di erent approaches were realized. The OGC1 Sensor observation Service supplies a standard to access these information, stored on servers. To be able to access these servers, an interface must be developed and implemented. The result should be a con gurable development framework for web-based GIS clients supporting the OGC sensor observation services. In particular the framework should allow continuous position updates of mobile sensors. Visualization features like charts, bounding boxes of sensors and data series should be included.
This thesis work presents the implementation and validation of image processing problems in hardware to estimate the performance and precision gain. It compares the implementation for the addressed problem on a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) with a software implementation for a General Purpose Processor (GPP) architecture. For both solutions the implementation costs for their development is an important aspect in the validation. The analysis of the flexibility and extendability that can be achieved by a modular implementation for the FPGA design was another major aspect. This work is based upon approaches from previous work, which included the detection of Binary Large OBjects (BLOBs) in static images and continuous video streams [13, 15]. One addressed problem of this work is the tracking of the detected BLOBs in continuous image material. This has been implemented for the FPGA platform and the GPP architecture. Both approaches have been compared with respect to performance and precision. This research project is motivated by the MI6 project of the Computer Vision research group, which is located at the Bonn-Rhein-Sieg University of Applied Sciences. The intent of the MI6 project is the tracking of a user in an immersive environment. The proposed solution is to attach a light emitting device to the user for tracking the created light dots on the projection surface of the immersive environment. Having the center points of those light dots would allow the estimation of the user’s position and orientation. One major issue that makes Computer Vision problems computationally expensive is the high amount of data that has to be processed in real-time. Therefore, one major target for the implementation was to get a processing speed of more than 30 frames per second. This would allow the system to realize feedback to the user in a response time which is faster than the human visual perception. One problem that comes with the idea of using a light emitting device to represent the user, is the precision error. Dependent on the resolution of the tracked projection surface of the immersive environment, a pixel might have a size in cm2. Having a precision error of only a few pixels, might lead to an offset in the estimated user’s position of several cm. In this research work the development and validation of a detection and tracking system for BLOBs on a Cyclone II FPGA from Altera has been realized. The system supports different input devices for the image acquisition and can perform detection and tracking for five to eight BLOBs. A further extension of the design has been evaluated and is possible with some constraints. Additional modules for compressing the image data based on run-length encoding and sub-pixel precision for the computed BLOB center-points have been designed. For the comparison of the FPGA approach for BLOB tracking a similar implementation in software using a multi-threaded approach has been realized. The system can transmit the detection or tracking results on two available communication interfaces, USB and RS232. The analysis of the hardware solution showed a similar precision for the BLOB detection and tracking as the software approach. One problem is the strong increase of the allocated resources when extending the system to process more BLOBs. With one of the applied target platforms, the DE2-70 board from Altera, the BLOB detection could be extended to process up to thirty BLOBs. The implementation of the tracking approach in hardware required much more effort than the software solution. The design of high level problems in hardware for this case are more expensive than the software implementation. The search and match steps in the tracking approach could be realized more efficiently and reliably in software. The additional pre-processing modules for sub-pixel precision and run-length-encoding helped to increase the system’s performance and precision.
This work extends the affordance-inspired robot control architecture introduced in the MACS project [35] and especially its approach to integrate symbolic planning systems given in [24] by providing methods to automated abstraction of affordances to high-level operators. It discusses how symbolic planning instances can be generated automatically based on these operators and introduces an instantiation method to execute the resulting plans. Preconditions and effects of agent behaviour are learned and represented in Gärdenfors conceptual spaces framework. Its notion of similarity is used to group behaviours to abstract operators based on the affordance-inspired, function-centred view on the environment. Ways on how the capabilities of conceptual spaces to map subsymbolic to symbolic representations to generate PDDL planning domains including affordance-based operators are discussed. During plan execution, affordance-based operators are instantiated by agent behaviour based on the situation directly before its execution. The current situation is compared to past ones and the behaviour that has been most successful in the past is applied. Execution failures can be repaired by action substitution. The concept of using contexts to dynamically change dimension salience as introduced by Gärdenfors is realized by using techniques from the field of feature selection. The approach is evaluated using a 3D simulation environment and implementations of several object manipulation behaviours.
The task of this thesis is to develop an OGC-compliant Sensor Observation Service (SOS) { a component of the SWE { for GPS related sensor data in this context. It should, in contrast to existing implementations, support full mobility of the sensors and be con gurable with respect to adding di erent kinds of sensors. In particular, mobile phones should be considered as sensors, which transmit their data to the SOS server through the transactional SOS interface.
Heutige Grid-Systeme sind in der Lage dem Nutzer verschiedenste Ressourcen einfach, transparent und sicher zur Verfügung zu stellen. Für die Ausführung von komplexen Workflows wird eine Advance Reservation benötigt, welche die Ausführung der einzelnen Workflowelemente zu vorher berechneten oder festgelegten Zeitpunkten ermöglicht. Durch die Advance Reservation werden die benötigten Ressourcen auf den Grid-Sites reserviert. In der von der Fraunhofer Gesellschaft eingesetzten Grid-Middleware-Software UNICORE wird eine solche Reservierung von Ressourcen bisher nicht unterstützt. Um die Reservierung in einem UNICORE Grid zu ermöglichen und die Co-Allokation von Ressourcen vorzunehmen, wurde im VIOLA Projekt der MetaScheduling Service (MSS) entwickelt. Über lokal auf den Grid-Ressourcen installierte Adapter kann der MSS Statusinformationen abfragen und Reservierungen vornehmen. Die Adapter sind als Webservice implementiert, was eine komplexe Installation und Konfiguration erfordert, da die Adapter Zugriff auf das lokale System benötigen. Durch eine doppelte Benutzerverwaltung und einer zur UNICORE Grid-Middleware parallelen Kommunikation wird die Anfälligkeit für Fehler erhöht.
Das Optimalziel für ein Logistiklager ist eine hohe Auslastung des Transportsystems. Es stellt sich somit die Frage nach der Auswahl der Aufträge, die gleichzeitig innerhalb des Lagers abgearbeitet werden, ohne Staus, Blockaden oder Überlastungen entstehen zu lassen. Dieser Auswahlprozess wird auch als Path-Packing bezeichnet. Diese Masterthesis untersucht das Path-Packing auf graphentheoretischer Ebene und stellt verschiedene Greedy-Heuristiken, eine Optimallösung auf Basis der Linearen Programmierung sowie einen kombinierten Ansatz gegenüber. Die Ansätze werden anhand von Messzeiten und Auslastungen unterschiedlich randomisiert erstellter Testdaten ausgewertet.
Heutzutage ist die Entwicklung von Luft- und Raumfahrzeugen ein komplexer und standardisierter Prozess, der verschiedene Disziplinen der Wissenschaft und des Ingenieurwesens vereint. Die Kenntnis flugphysikalischer Eigenschaften, insbesondere Aerodynamik und Strömung, ist für den Entwurf von Luft- und Raumfahrzeugen unerlässlich. Um den Aufwand zur Berechnung dieser Eigenschaften zu verringern, wurden Methoden und Werkzeuge zur computergestützten Simulation entworfen. Diese werden in integrierten simulationsbasierten Entwicklungsprozessen zusammengefasst. Dadurch ist es beispielsweise möglich, Zeitersparnisse von bis zu mehreren Jahren, gegenüber physikalischen Tests in Windkanälen, zu erzielen [Bec08].