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Institut
- Fachbereich 4 (132) (entfernen)
In Enhanced Reality Umgebungen nimmt der Betrachter die Umgebung und zusätzliche, in eine halbdurchsichtige Datenbrille eingeblendete Informationen wahr. Das Kalibrierungsproblem der Datenbrille ist die Aufgabe, die eingeblendete Information mit dem korrekten realen Hintergrund zur Deckung zu bringen. Heutige Datenbrillen sind vergleichsweise klobig und schwer, deshalb kommt es häufig zu leichtem Verrutschen der Brille. Wird dieses Verrutschen nicht in die Position der Einblendung in der Brille einbezogen, so passt die Einblendung nicht mehr zum realen Hintergrund. Dies wird in Abbildung 1.1 exemplarisch dargestellt. Nach initialer Kalibrierung der teildurchsichtigen Datenbrille auf das Auge des Betrachters soll deshalb bei relativer Lageveränderung der Datenbrille zum Auge (durch leichtes Verrutschen) eine Re-Kalibrierung in Echtzeit automatisch erfolgen. Eine automatische Re-Kalibrierung bei Verrutschen wird von uns erstmalig erforscht.
Ziel des Verbundprojektes 3D-RETISEG ist es, ein optimiertes echtzeitfähiges Soft- und Hardwarepaket zur 2D/3D-Segmentierung und Klassifizierung basierend auf hierarchischen Inselstrukturen, und zur schnellen Volumenvisualisierung sehr großer Volumendaten aus komprimierten Datensätzen zu entwickeln. Die Entwicklungen sollen in konkreten Anwendungsfällen der Forschung und der Wirtschaft als marktreifes Modul in das Softwarepaket VGStudioMax integriert werden. In der Medizin, speziell bei der Segmentierung von Volumendatensätzen, die durch unterschiedliche Tomographietechniken (z.B. CT und MRI) erzeugt werden, liefern zweidimensionale Verfahren häufig eine unzureichende Qualität aufgrund der anisotropen Berücksichtigung der Rauminformationen. Bisher entwickelte dreidimensionale Verfahren sind, neben der der schlechten Verfügbarkeit ihrer Implementierungen, häufig nur für bestimmte Fragestellungen dediziert und daher für andere Anwendungsfälle schlecht adaptierbar. Weiterhin benötigen Verfahren, die gute Ergebnisse liefern, meist eine hohe Laufzeit. Dies ist aber speziell in medizinischen Anwendungen von großem Nachteil, da hier die Qualität der Ergebnisse in letzter Instanz von einem Experten beurteilt wird. Damit das Ergebnis schnell zu benutzerdefinierten Optimierungen durch Veränderung der Verfahrensparameter zur Verfügung steht, sollte ein Verfahren nur sehr kurze Rechenzeiten benötigen. Weist ein Verfahren eine geringe Laufzeit auf, so kann es außerdem intra-operativ eingesetzt werden. Der hier im Projekt verwendete 3D-Color-Structure-Code verspricht, ein besseres und generisches Verfahren zu ermöglichen.
We present a non-linear camera pose estimator, which is able to handle a combined input of point and line feature correspondences. For three or more correspondences, the estimator works on any arbitrary number and choice of the feature type, which provides an estimation of the pose on a preferably small and flexible amount of 2D-3D correspondences. We also give an analysis of different minimization techniques, parametrizations of the pose data, and of error measurements between 2D and 3D data. These will be tested for the usage of point features, lines and the combination case. The result shows the most stable and fast working non-linear parameter set for pose estimation in model-based tracking.
The processing of data is often restricted by contractual and legal requirements for protecting privacy and IPRs. Policies provide means to control how and by whom data is processed. Conditions of policies may depend on the previous processing of the data. However, existing policy languages do not provide means to express such conditions. In this work we present a formal model and language allowing for specifying conditions based on the history of data processing. We base the model and language on XACML.
In dieser Arbeit wird ein Mehrbenutzer-Annotationssystem namens myAnnotations vorgestellt, das mit Hilfe von sogenannten "Shared In-situ Problem Solving" Annotationen auf beliebigen Webseiten kollaborative Lern- und Arbeitsszenarien unterstützt. Hierbei wird insbesondere auf die Einsatzmöglichkeiten von "Shared In-situ Problem Solving" Annotationen beim kollaborativen Bearbeiten eines Textes und bei kollaborativen Lernerfolgskontrollen eingegangen.
In dieser Arbeit wird ein Datenmodell für Shared Annotations vorgestellt. Basierend auf einem bereits existierenden Datenmodell für Annotationen, wird dieses erweitert um die Möglichkeit der Modellierung von Shared Annotations. Daraufhin werden Funktionen von Shared Annotations erläutert, die über das neue Annotationsmodell möglich sind.
Information systems research has started to use crowdsourcing platforms such as Amazon Mechanical Turks (MTurk) for scientific research, recently. In particular, MTurk provides a scalable, cheap work-force that can also be used as a pool of potential respondents for online survey research. In light of the increasing use of crowdsourcing platforms for survey research, the authors aim to contribute to the understanding of its appropriate usage. Therefore, they assess if samples drawn from MTurk deviate from those drawn via conventional online surveys (COS) in terms of answers in relation to relevant e-commerce variables and test the data in a nomological network for assessing differences in effects.
The authors compare responses from 138 MTurk workers with those of 150 German shoppers recruited via COS. The findings indicate, inter alia, that MTurk workers tend to exhibit more positive word-of mouth, perceived risk, customer orientation and commitment to the focal company. The authors discuss the study- results, point to limitations, and provide avenues for further research.
Social networking platforms as creativity fostering systems: research model and exploratory study
(2008)
Social networking platforms are enabling users to create their own content, share this content with anyone they invite and organize connections with existing or new online contacts. Within these electronic environments users voluntarily add comments on virtual boards, distribute their search results or add information about their expertise areas to their social networking profiles and thereby share it with acquaintances, friends and increasingly even with colleagues in the corporate world. As a result, it is most likely that the underlying knowledge sharing processes result in many new and creative ideas. The objective of our research therefore is to understand if and how social social networking platforms can enforce creativity. In addition, we look at how these processes could be embedded within the organizational structures that influence innovative knowledge sharing behavior. The basis for our research is a framework which focuses on the relations between intrinsic motivation, creativity and social networking platforms. First results of our empirical investigation of a social software platform called "StudiVZ.net" proved that our two propositions are valid.
Die Bedeutung von Innovation für die Sicherung der Unternehmensexistenz nimmt zu. Gerade im Bereich der Informations- und Kommunikationssysteme zwingen veränderte Rahmenbedingungen, verkürzte Produktlebenszyklen und verstärkter Wettbewerb viele Unternehmen zur Anpassung ihrer Innovationsgeschwindigkeit. Langfristiger Erfolg wird sich nur für die Unternehmen einstellen, denen es gelingt, durch technologische Innovationen ihre Wettbewerbsposition zu festigen oder auszubauen. Dies erfordert einen gesonderten Umgang mit technologischen Innovationen und verlangt nach einem Technologie- und Innovationsmanagement. Dabei ist nicht jede Innovation das Produkt einer einmaligen, möglicherweise gar spontanen Idee. Viele Innovationen entstehen aus der Integration oder Kombination bereits bewährter Technologien. Dies ist besonders interessant, wenn die originären Technologien Branchen entstammen, die nur noch marginale Wachstumsraten aufweisen. Aufbauend auf den Besonderheiten des Fallbeispiels Decision on Demand werden in diesem Artikel existierende Mängel etablierter Vorschläge für ein strategisches Technologie- und Innovationsmanagement identifiziert und die Rolle von modularer Technologieintegration als Alternative diskutiert.
Die folgende Arbeit soll einen Überblick über bestehende Lösungen zur Interaktion in Erweiterten Realitäten (Augmented Reality) schaffen. Hierzu werden anhand dreier grundlegender Betrachtungsweisen unterschiedliche Interaktionskonzepte und -umsetzungen sowohl von der technischen, als auch von der konzeptuellen Seite her, vorgestellt. Neben Fragen der Visualisierung werden unterschiedliche Typen von Benutzungsschnittstellen vorstellt. Den größten Teil nehmen die drei typischen Interaktionsaufgaben Selektion- und Manipulation, Navigation und Systemkontrolle und die damit verbundenen Interaktionstechniken ein. Die Inhalte des Arbeitsberichts beschränken sich auf den Einsatz von Interaktionelementen in Augmented Reality Umgebungen. Dies geschieht in Abgrenzung zu Forschungsarbeiten auf dem Gebiet zu Interaktionstechniken in Virtual Reality Umgebungen (vollimmersiv oder auch desktoporientiert). Zwar standen und stehen viele Interaktionstechniken aus dem Bereich VR in der AR Pate, doch haben sich gerade im Bereich der AR neue Techniken und Konzepte entwickelt. Folglich sollen VR Techniken nur dann betrachtet werden, wenn Sie in AR Anwendungen angewendet wurden bzw. wenn ihre Anwendung sinnvoll erscheint.
Modeling and publishing Linked Open Data (LOD) involves the choice of which vocabulary to use. This choice is far from trivial and poses a challenge to a Linked Data engineer. It covers the search for appropriate vocabulary terms, making decisions regarding the number of vocabularies to consider in the design process, as well as the way of selecting and combining vocabularies. Until today, there is no study that investigates the different strategies of reusing vocabularies for LOD modeling and publishing. In this paper, we present the results of a survey with 79 participants that examines the most preferred vocabulary reuse strategies of LOD modeling. Participants of our survey are LOD publishers and practitioners. Their task was to assess different vocabulary reuse strategies and explain their ranking decision. We found significant differences between the modeling strategies that range from reusing popular vocabularies, minimizing the number of vocabularies, and staying within one domain vocabulary. A very interesting insight is that the popularity in the meaning of how frequent a vocabulary is used in a data source is more important than how often individual classes and properties arernused in the LOD cloud. Overall, the results of this survey help in understanding the strategies how data engineers reuse vocabularies, and theyrnmay also be used to develop future vocabulary engineering tools.
Existing tools for generating application programming interfaces (APIs) for ontologies lack sophisticated support for mapping the logics-based concepts of the ontology to an appropriate object-oriented implementation of the API. Such a mapping has to overcome the fundamental differences between the semantics described in the ontology and the pragmatics, i.e., structure, functionalities, and behavior implemented in the API. Typically, concepts from the ontology are mapped one-to-one to classes in the targeted programming language. Such a mapping only produces concept representations but not an API at the desired level of granularity expected by an application developer. We present a Model-Driven Engineering (MDE) process to generate customized APIs for ontologies. This API generation is based on the semantics defined in the ontology but also leverages additional information the ontology provides. This can be the inheritance structure of the ontology concepts, the scope of relevance of an ontology concept, or design patterns defined in the ontology.
Networked RDF graphs
(2007)
Networked graphs are defined in this paper as a small syntactic extension of named graphs in RDF. They allow for the definition of a graph by explicitly listing triples as well as by SPARQL queries on one or multiple other graphs. By this extension it becomes possible to define a graph including a view onto other graphs and to define the meaning of a set of graphs by the way they reference each other. The semantics of networked graphs is defined by their mapping into logic programs. The expressiveness and computational complexity of networked graphs, varying by the set of constraints imposed on the underlying SPARQL queries, is investigated. We demonstrate the capabilities of networked graphs by a simple use case.
The Multimedia Metadata Ontology (M3O) provides a generic modeling framework for representing multimedia metadata. It has been designed based on an analysis of existing metadata standards and metadata formats. The M3O abstracts from the existing metadata standards and formats and provides generic modeling solutions for annotations, decompositions, and provenance of metadata. Being a generic modeling framework, the M3O aims at integrating the existing metadata standards and metadata formats rather than replacing them. This is in particular useful as today's multimedia applications often need to combine and use more than one existing metadata standard or metadata format at the same time. However, applying and specializing the abstract and powerful M3O modeling framework in concrete application domains and integrating it with existing metadata formats and metadata standards is not always straightforward. Thus, we have developed a step-by-step alignment method that describes how to integrate existing multimedia metadata standards and metadata formats with the M3O in order to use them in a concrete application. We demonstrate our alignment method by integrating seven different existing metadata standards and metadata formats with the M3O and describe the experiences made during the integration process.
The lack of a formal event model hinders interoperability in distributed event-based systems. Consequently, we present in this paper a formal model of events, called F. The model bases on an upper-level ontology and pro-vides comprehensive support for all aspects of events such as time and space, objects and persons involved, as well as the structural aspects, namely mereological, causal, and correlational relationships. The event model provides a flexible means for event composition, modeling of event causality and correlation, and allows for representing different interpretations of the same event. The foundational event model F is developed in a pattern-oriented approach, modularized in different ontologies, and can be easily extended by domain specifific ontologies.
Schema information about resources in the Linked Open Data (LOD) cloud can be provided in a twofold way: it can be explicitly defined by attaching RDF types to the resources. Or it is provided implicitly via the definition of the resources´ properties.
In this paper, we analyze the correlation between the two sources of schema information. To this end, we have extracted schema information regarding the types and properties defined in two datasets of different size. One dataset is a LOD crawl from TimBL- FOAF profile (11 Mio. triple) and the second is an extract from the Billion Triples Challenge 2011 dataset (500 Mio. triple). We have conducted an in depth analysis and have computed various entropy measures as well as the mutual information encoded in this two manifestations of schema information.
Our analysis provides insights into the information encoded in the different schema characteristics. It shows that a schema based on either types or properties alone will capture only about 75% of the information contained in the data. From these observations, we derive conclusions about the design of future schemas for LOD.
Designing Core Ontologies
(2011)
One of the key factors that hinders integration of distributed, heterogeneous information systems is the lack of a formal basis for modeling the complex, structured knowledge that is to be exchanged. To alleviate this situation, we present an approach based on core ontologies. Core ontologies are characterized by a high degree of axiomatization and formal precision. This is achieved by basing on a foundational ontology. In addition, core ontologies should follow a pattern-oriented design approach. By this, they are modular and extensible. Core ontologies allow for reusing the structured knowledge they define as well as integrating existing domainrnknowledge. The structured knowledge of the core ontologies is clearly separated from the domain-specific knowledge. Such core ontologies allow for both formally conceptualize their particular fields and to be flexibly combined to cover the needsrnof concrete, complex application domains. Over the last years, we have developed three independent core ontologies for events and objects, multimedia annotations, and personal information management. In this paper, we present the simultaneousrnuse and integration of our core ontologies at the example of a complex, distributed socio-technical system of emergency response. We describe our design approach for core ontologies and discuss the lessons learned in designing them. Finally, we elaborate on the beauty aspects of our core ontologies.
We propose a new approach for mobile visualization and interaction of temporal information by integrating support for time with today's most prevalent visualization of spatial information, the map. Our approach allows for an easy and precise selection of the time that is of interest and provides immediate feedback to the users when interacting with it. It has been developed in an evolutionary process gaining formative feedback from end users.
In this paper, we compare two approaches for exploring large,rnhierarchical data spaces of social media data on mobile devicesrnusing facets. While the first approach arranges thernfacets in a 3x3 grid, the second approach makes use of arnscrollable list of facets for exploring the data. We have conductedrna between-group experiment of the two approachesrnwith 24 subjects (20 male, 4 female) executing the same set ofrntasks of typical mobile users" information needs. The resultsrnshow that the grid-based approach requires significantly morernclicks, but subjects need less time for completing the tasks.rnFurthermore, it shows that the additional clicks do not hamperrnthe subjects" satisfaction. Thus, the results suggest thatrnthe grid-based approach is a better choice for faceted searchrnon touchscreen mobile devices. To the best of our knowledge,rnsuch a summative evaluation of different approaches for facetedrnsearch on mobile devices has not been done so far.