Refine
Year of publication
- 2016 (34) (remove)
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (13)
- Article (9)
- Part of a Book (3)
- Part of Periodical (3)
- Contribution to a Periodical (2)
- Book (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Report (1)
- Research Data (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (34)
Keywords
- Automation (1)
- Fachhochschule (1)
- Gewebediagnostik (1)
- Hochschule Ruhr West (1)
- Human-machine Interaction (1)
- Induktive Messsysteme (1)
- Mülheim an der Ruhr (1)
- Open educational resources (1)
- Risk Management (1)
- Safety-critical Systems (1)
MeHRWert Ausgabe 8 März 2016
(2016)
Nowadays, teachers and students utilize different ICT devices for conducting innovative and educational activities from anywhere at any time. The enactment of these activities relies on robust communication and computational infrastructures used for supporting technological devices enabling better accessibility to educational resources and pedagogical scaffolds, wherever and whenever necessary. In this paper, we present EDU.Tube: an interactive environment that relies on web and mobile solutions offered to teachers and students for authoring and incorporating educational interactions at specific moments along the time line of occasional YouTube video-clips. The teachers and students could later experience these authored artefacts while interacting from their stationary or mobile devices. We describe our efforts related to the design, deployment and evaluation of an educational activity supported by the EDU.Tube environment. Furthermore, we illustrate the specific teachers’ and students’ efforts practiced along the different phases of this educational activity. The evaluation of this activity and results are presented, followed by a discussion of these findings, as well as some recommendations for future research efforts further elaborating on EDU.Tube’s aspects in relation to learning analytics.
A simple copper coil without a voluminous stationary magnet can be utilized as a non-contacting transmitter and as a detector for ultrasonic vibrations in metals. Advantages of such compact EMATs without (electro-)magnet might be: applications in critical environments (hot, narrow, presence of iron filings…), potentially superior fields (then improved ultrasound transmission and more sensitive ultrasound detection).
The induction field of an EMAT strongly influences ultrasound transduction in the nearby metal. Herein, a simplified analytical method for field description at high liftoff is presented. Within certain limitations this method reasonably describes magnetic fields (and resulting eddy currents, inductances, Lorentz forces, acoustic pressures) of even complex coil arrangements. The methods can be adapted to conventional EMATS with a separate stationary magnet.
Increased distances (liftoff) are challenging and technically relevant, and this practical question is addressed: with limited electrical power and given free space between transducer and target metal, what would be the most efficient geometry of a circular coil? Furthermore, more complex coil geometries (“butterfly coil”) with a concentrated field and relatively higher reach are briefly investigated.
The goal of this paper is to define relevant barriers to the exchange of Open Educational Resources in local public administrations. Building upon a cultural model, eleven experts were interviewed and asked to evaluate several factors, such as openness in discourse, learning at the workplace, and superior support, among others. The result is a set of socio-cultural factors that shape the use of Open Educational Resources in public administrations. Significant factors are, in this respect, the independent choice of learning resources, the spirit of the platform, the range of available formats and access to technologies. Practitioners use these factors to elaborate on the readiness of public administrations towards the use of open e-Learning systems. To academic debates on culture in e-Learning, the results provide an alternative model that is contextualized to meet the demands of public sector contexts. Overall, the paper contributes to the lack of research about open e-Learning systems in the public sector, as well as regarding culture in the management of learning and knowledge exchange.
Background:
Detection of influential actors in social media such as Twitter or Facebook plays an important role for improving the quality and efficiency of work and services in many fields such as education and marketing.
Methods:
The work described here aims to introduce a new approach that characterizes the influence of actors by the strength of attracting new active members into a networked community. We present a model of influence of an actor that is based on the attractiveness of the actor in terms of the number of other new actors with which he or she has established relations over time.
Results:
We have used this concept and measure of influence to determine optimal seeds in a simulation of influence maximization using two empirically collected social networks for the underlying graphs.
Conclusions:
Our empirical results on the datasets demonstrate that our measure stands out as a useful measure to define the attractors comparing to the other influence measures.
Touch versus mid-air gesture interfaces in road scenarios-measuring driver performance degradation
(2016)
We present a study aimed at comparing the degradation of the driver's performance during touch gesture vs mid-air gesture use for infotainment system control. To this end, 17 participants were asked to perform the Lane Change Test. This requires each participant to steer a vehicle in a simulated driving environment while interacting with an infotainment system via touch and mid-air gestures. The decrease in performance is measured as the deviation from an optimal baseline. This study concludes comparable deviations from the baseline for the secondary task of infotainment interaction for both interaction variants. This is significant as all participants are experienced in touch interaction, however have had no experience at all with mid-air gesture interaction, favoring mid-air gestures for the long-term scenario.
Aktiv im Alter
(2016)
Die Prognosen für den demografischen Wandel sind eindeutig: In den kommenden Jahren wird es immer mehr Menschen über 65 Jahre geben. Damit verbunden sind große Herausforderungen für die Gesellschaft und ihre Sozialsysteme, aber auch für viele Angehörige, die ihre Verwandten im Alter pflegen. Doch nicht alle älteren Menschen leben im Kreise ihrer Familie oder können sich Fremdbetreuung durch Pflegedienste leisten. Häufig übernehmen Nachbarn oder Freunde aus der Umgebung diese Aufgabe. Für diese Menschen wird das Wohnquartier zum zentralen Gesundheitsstandort.
Im besten Fall können sie dort ihren Alltag noch lange selbstständig bewältigen und ihre sozialen Kontakte aufrechterhalten. Das soll bald eine App unterstützen. Sie ist Teil eines Trainingsprogramms, das die Hochschule für Gesundheit (hsg) im Verbund mit der Hochschule Ruhr West erarbeitet. Der Name des Projekts ist Programm: „Quartier agil – Aktiv vor Ort“. Mit Übungen zum kognitiven und körperlichen Training, Angeboten für Gruppenaktivitäten, Kommunikationsforen und Funktionen zur Selbstkontrolle wollen die Forscherinnen und Forscher
ältere Menschen fit halten.
Positive Computing umfasst Design, Realisierung und Bewertung von Anwendungssystemen und deren Einflüsse mit dem Ziel, Lebensqualität und Wohlbefinden von Menschen zu verbessern und sie bei der Entfaltung ihrer Potenziale zu unterstützen. Das Institut Positive Computing (IPCo) an der Hochschule Ruhr West soll dieses neue Paradigma in einem inter- und transdisziplinären Ansatz erschließen, untersuchen und umsetzen. Das Paradigma ist anwendbar auf nahezu alle Bereiche des privaten und beruflichen Lebens. Die Forschung des IPCo fokussiert zunächst jedoch auf die positive Nutzung von Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologien (IKT) für generationenübergreifende Herausforderungen. Hierzu sollen technologische Lösungen unter kontinuierlicher Einbeziehung menschlicher Bedürfnisse und sozialer Fragestellungen erarbeitet
werden.
This article presents a omparative study of the barriers to open e-learning in public administrations in Luxembourg, Germany, Montenegro and Ireland. It discusses the current state of open e-learning of public administration employees at the local government level and derives the barriers to such learning. This paper's main contribution is its presentation of an empirical set of barriers in the four European countries. The results allow informed assumptions about which barriers will arise in the forthcoming use of open-source e-learning technology, particularly open educational resources as means of learning. Furthermore, this study offers a contextualised barrier framework that allows the systematic capture and comparison of challenges for future studies in the field. Other practical contributions include providing advice about open e-learning programmes, systematising lessons learned and addressing managerial implications.
Technologie die beflügelt
(2016)
Die spezifischen Herausforderungen des Fachgebiets bedürfen jedoch auch weiterhin einer Diskussion und der Entwicklung neuer Methoden und Ansätze zur Gestaltung von Informationssystemen. Diese sollen dieses Jahr adressiert werden. Generell fokussieren wir eher auf die Effekte von Technologien auf realweltliche Praktiken, als auf die isolierte Technologie. Auch der auf diesen Beiträgen basierende Workshop legt aktuelle Entwicklungen und Fragestellungen offen und gibt neue Impulse für das Forschungsgebiet. Der Workshop wird dabei zweigeteilt gestaltet: Innerhalb des ersten Teils wird den Vortragenden die Möglichkeit gegeben die eigenen Forschungsarbeiten zu präsentieren. Dabei sind sowohl designorientierte, praxisbasierte Analysen und Studien, als auch entwickelte und evaluierte Prototypen neuer Technologien von Interesse. Es wird den Vortragenden die Möglichkeit gegeben die eigenen Forschungsarbeiten teilweise in einem eher frühen Stadium in kompakter Form zu präsentieren und anschließend in Hinblick auf deren Weiterentwicklung diskutieren.
We present a publicly available benchmark database for the problem of hand posture recognition from noisy depth data and fused RGB-D data obtained from low-cost time-of-flight (ToF) sensors. The database is the most extensive database of this kind containing over a million data samples (point clouds) recorded from 35 different individuals for ten different static hand postures. This captures a great amount of variance, due to person-related factors, but also scaling, translation and rotation are explicitly represented. Benchmark results achieved with a standard classification algorithm are computed by cross-validation both over samples and persons, the latter implying training on all persons but one and testing on the remaining one. An important result using this database is that cross-validation performance over samples (which is the standard procedure in machine learning) is systematically higher than cross-validation performance over persons, which is to our mind the true application-relevant measure of generalization performance.
Given the success of convolutional neural networks (CNNs) during recent years in numerous object recognition tasks, it seems logical to further extend their applicability to the treatment of three-dimensional data such as point clouds provided by depth sensors. To this end, we present an approach exploiting the CNN’s ability of automated feature generation and combine it with a novel 3D feature computation technique, preserving local information contained in the data. Experiments are conducted on a large data set of 600.000 samples of hand postures obtained via ToF (time-of-flight) sensors from 20 different persons, after an extensive parameter search in order to optimize network structure. Generalization performance, measured by a leave-one-person-out scheme, exceeds that of any other method presented for this specific task, bringing the error for some persons down to 1.5 %.
In catastrophic events, the potential of help has grown through new technologies. Voluntary help has many forms. Within this paper different categories of voluntary help are suggested. Those categories are based on properties like organizational structures, helping process, kind of prosocial behavior and many more. A focus is clearly on the organizational structure and motivational aspects of helper groups. Examples are given for each category. The categorization’s aim is to give a brief overview of possible properties a group of system users could have.
We present a light-weight real-time applicable 3D-gesture recognition system on mobile devices for improved Human-Machine Interaction. We utilize time-of-flight data coming from a single sensor and implement the whole gesture recognition pipeline on two different devices outlining the potential of integrating these sensors onto mobile devices. The main components are responsible for cropping the data to the essentials, calculation of meaningful features, training and classifying via neural networks and realizing a GUI on the device. With our system we achieve recognition rates of up to 98% on a 10-gesture set with frame rates reaching 20Hz, more than sufficient for any real-time applications.
This contribution presents a novel approach of utilizing Time-of-Flight (ToF) technology for mid-air hand gesture recognition on mobile devices. ToF sensors are capable of providing depth data at high frame rates independent of illumination making any kind of application possible for in- and outdoor situations. This comes at the cost of precision regarding depth measurements and comparatively low lateral resolution. We present a novel feature generation technique based on a rasterization of the point clouds which
realizes fixed-sized input making Deep Learning approaches applicable using Convolutional Neural Networks. In order to increase precision we introduce several methods to reduce noise and normalize the input to overcome difficulties in scaling. Backed by a large-scale database of about half
a million data samples taken from different individuals our
contribution shows how hand gesture recognition is realiz-
able on commodity tablets in real-time at frame rates of up to 17Hz. A leave-one out cross-validation experiment
demonstrates the feasibility of our approach with classification errors as low as 1,5% achieved persons unknown to the model.
Technical Report
(2016)
This internal report discusses the theoretical and practical aspects of the cluster management framework SimpleHydra, which was developed in order to allow researchers the quick setup of classical small to mid-scale computation clusters while being as lightweight and platform independent as possible. We motivate crucial design choices with a theoretical analysis in the aspect of time and space complexity, furthermore we give a comprehensive introduction regarding the frameworks usage (which includes examples and detailed description of fundamental concepts as well as data structures). In addition to that we illustrate application scenarios with complete source code examples. Furthermore we hope that this document proves valuable not only as a development report but also as a practical manual for SimpleHydra.