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Automotive user interfaces and, in particular, automated vehicle technology pose a plenty of challenges to researchers, vehicle manufacturers, and third-party suppliers to support all diverse facets of user needs. To give an example, they emerge from the variation of different user groups ranging from inexperienced, thrill-seeking young novice drivers to elderly drivers with all their natural limitations. To allow assessing the quality of automotive user interfaces and automated driving technology already during development and within virtual test processes, the proposed workshop is dedicated to the quest of finding objective, quantifiable quality criteria for describing future driving experiences. The workshop is intended for HCI, AutomotiveUI, and "Human Factors" researchers and practitioners as well for designers and developers. In adherence to the conference main topic "Spielend einfach interagieren" this workshop calls in particular for contributions in the area of human factors and ergonomics (user acceptance, trust, user experience, driving fun, natural user interfaces etc.) and artificial intelligence (predictive HMIs, adaptive systems, intuitive interaction).
The detection of soil erosion processes in dams, hydraulic heave failure or corrosion processes of reinforcing steel in concrete are a small selection of measuring applications in civil engineering where the impedance analysis can be used to determine the measurand. Those measuring applications are having high requirements for the measuring hardware. For example a common interface for fast data exchange, high resolution, independent functionality and easy customizability to suit the measuring application. For that reason, a well-known application for steel-mill process monitoring can be used as a development platform. This hardware platform is based on a vector network analyzer and is meeting the requirements mainly. However, a couple of modifications has to be made, like replacing the ADC for a higher sample rate, Ethernet for easy and fast data exchange and the microcontroller for more calculation power.
Process Monitoring in Steel-Mills using Impedance Analysis: VNA Improvement for Data Acquisition
(2017)
The process automation extends over every manufacturing step of a product in the steel-mill to increase the quality, quantity and energy efficiency. The product dimensions are an important part of the quality control; these must maintain the specified tolerances. Additional to the cross-sectional-area, the measured data contains much more information about the manufacturing process, e.g. eccentricity, condition of the rolls and defects of the rod. For analyzing the measured data and to gather more information about the manufacturing process it is necessary to increase the speed of the data acquisition by performing some modifications of the VNA, e.g. faster analog to digital converter and microcontroller, improved firmware and optimized values of the passive electrical components for faster time constants and transient responses.
Applying step heating thermography to wind turbine rotor blades as a non-destructive testing method
(2017)
Checking wind turbines for damage is a common problem for operators of wind parks, as regular inspections are legally required in many countries and prevention is economically viable. While some of the common forms of damage are easily visible on the surface, structural problems can remain invisible for years before they eventually result in catastrophic failure of a rotor blade. Common forms of testing fibre composite parts like ultrasonic testing or X-ray tests are impractical due to the large dimensions of wind turbine components and their limited accessibility for any short-range methods. Active thermographic inspection of wind turbines is a promising approach to testing for structural flaws beneath the surface of rotor blades. As part of an ongoing research project, a setup for testing the general viability of this method was built and used to compare different thermographic cameras. A sample cut from a discarded rotor blade was modified to emulate structural damage. The results are promising for the development of a cost effective on-site testing system.
Increasing economic viability and safety through structural health monitoring of wind turbines
(2017)
Serious accidents with property damage or even human casualties, result from structural flaws in wind turbine rotor blades. Common maintenance practices result in long downtimes and do not lead to the required results. Therefore, the Ruhr West University of Applied Sciences and the iQbis Consulting GmbH, currently research a new structural health monitoring method for wind turbine rotor blades. The goal of this project is to build a sensor system that can detect structural weaknesses inside of rotor blades without the need of downtime for industrial climbers. This technology has the potential to prevent accidents, save lives, extend the useful life of wind turbines and optimize the production of green energy.
We present a pipeline for recognizing dynamic freehand gestures on mobile devices based on extracting depth information coming from a single Time-of-Flight sensor. Hand gestures are recorded with a mobile 3D sensor, transformed frame by frame into an appropriate 3D descriptor and fed into a deep LSTM network for recognition purposes. LSTM being a recurrent neural model, it is uniquely suited for classifying explicitly time-dependent data such as hand gestures. For training and testing purposes, we create a small database of four hand gesture classes, each comprising 40 × 150 3D frames. We conduct experiments concerning execution speed on a mobile device, generalization capability as a function of network topology, and classification ability ‘ahead of time’, i.e., when the gesture is not yet completed. Recognition rates are high (>95%) and maintainable in real-time as a single classification step requires less than 1 ms computation time, introducing freehand gestures for mobile systems.
Anonymity-preserving Methods for Client-side Filtering in Position-based Collaboration Approaches
(2017)
In recent times, a lot of attacks against central server infrastructures have been recognized. Those infrastructures have seen attacks ranging from attacks against Internt of Things (IoT) infrastructures, via attacks against public infrastructure to attacks against cryptocurrency exchanges and blockchain based infrastructures themselves, e.g., the already almost legendary Decentralized Autonomous Organization (DAO) hack. Measured by press coverage, attacks against cryptocurrency exchanges and infrastructures seem to be among the most prominently reported attacks, probably due to the large amount of money that is stolen during those attacks and the great (but obviously still quite risky) potential (and financial involvement) of the blockchain technology. Naturally, attacks like the ones we have seen recently in crease the notion of uncertainty of blockchain technologies among the people,mreflected in lower values of cryptocurrencies in general. Obviously, this demands for an overall increase of security of cryptocurrency based technologies. Therefore, this paper provides an architectural approach, based on a proxy,to increase security of publicly available nodes of a blockchain based technology. Furthermore, it provides a first evaluation of the approach based on the results of an extensive community test of a new cryptocurrency.
Wissensmanagement (WM) und IT-gestütztes Lernen sind gerade in kleinen Behörden der Öffentlichen Verwaltung (ÖV), wie z.B. in ländlichen
Gemeinden, noch ausbaufähig. Am Beispiel des EU-Projekts EAGLE werden
Projektergebnisse als Verbesserungsansätze für ein arbeitsprozessorientiertes, IT-gestütztes Lernen vorgestellt. Neuartige Plattform-Features und ihr ÖV-spezifischer Nutzen werden erläutert. Die Ergebnisse der Plattformvalidierung werden vorgestellt. Ferner werden Vorschläge gemacht, wie die Ergebnisse aus EAGLE mit WM und weiteren Wissensquellen der ÖV, wie z.B. der Registratur, zu einem Gesamtkonzept mit bereits vorhandenen Fortbildungs- und WM-Ansätzen verbunden werden können.
Practical application of object detection systems, in research or industry, favors highly optimized black box solutions. We show how such a highly optimized system can be further augmented in terms of its reliability with only a minimal increase of computation times, i.e. preserving realtime boundaries. Our solution leaves the initial (HOG-based) detector unchanged and introduces novel concepts of non-linear metrics and fusion of ROIs. In this context we also introduce a novel way of combining feature vectors for mean-shift grouping. We evaluate our approach on a standarized image database with a HOG detector, which is representative for practical applications. Our results show that the amount of false-positive detections can be reduced by a factor of 4 with a negligable complexity increase. Although introduced and applied to a HOG-based system, our approach can easily be adapted for different detectors.
Web based security applications have become increasingly important in the past years. Especially in times of blockchain based crypto currencies, user authentication is a critical aspect for the overall security, integrity and acceptance of such systems. While blockchain technologies provide a decentralized approach, the client side still largely relies on centralized security approaches. Those centralized approaches are easier to implement, but at the same time bear the risk of usual security flaws. Therefore, this paper presents a decentralized approach for increasing the security by adding a decentralized two-factor authentication mechanism to the execution of
operations.
In this contribution we present a novel approach to transform data from time-of-flight (ToF) sensors to be interpretable by Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). As ToF data tends to be overly noisy depending on various factors such as illumination, reflection coefficient and distance, the need for a robust algorithmic approach becomes evident. By spanning a three-dimensional grid of fixed size around each point cloud we are able to transform three-dimensional input to become processable by CNNs. This simple and effective neighborhood-preserving methodology demonstrates that CNNs are indeed able to extract the relevant information and learn a set of filters, enabling them to differentiate a complex set of ten different gestures obtained from 20 different individuals and containing 600.000 samples overall. Our 20-fold cross-validation shows the generalization performance of the network, achieving an accuracy of up to 98.5% on validation sets comprising 20.000 data samples. The real-time applicability of our system is demonstrated via an interactive validation on an infotainment system running with up to 40fps on an iPad in the vehicle interior.