@phdthesis{Ullmann2015, author = {Ullmann, Tobias}, title = {Characterization of Arctic Environment by Means of Polarimetric Synthetic Aperture Radar (PolSAR) Data and Digital Elevation Models (DEM)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-115719}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {The ecosystem of the high northern latitudes is affected by the recently changing environmental conditions. The Arctic has undergone a significant climatic change over the last decades. The land coverage is changing and a phenological response to the warming is apparent. Remotely sensed data can assist the monitoring and quantification of these changes. The remote sensing of the Arctic was predominantly carried out by the usage of optical sensors but these encounter problems in the Arctic environment, e.g. the frequent cloud cover or the solar geometry. In contrast, the imaging of Synthetic Aperture Radar is not affected by the cloud cover and the acquisition of radar imagery is independent of the solar illumination. The objective of this work was to explore how polarimetric Synthetic Aperture Radar (PolSAR) data of TerraSAR-X, TanDEM-X, Radarsat-2 and ALOS PALSAR and interferometric-derived digital elevation model data of the TanDEM-X Mission can contribute to collect meaningful information on the actual state of the Arctic Environment. The study was conducted for Canadian sites of the Mackenzie Delta Region and Banks Island and in situ reference data were available for the assessment. The up-to-date analysis of the PolSAR data made the application of the Non-Local Means filtering and of the decomposition of co-polarized data necessary. The Non-Local Means filter showed a high capability to preserve the image values, to keep the edges and to reduce the speckle. This supported not only the suitability for the interpretation but also for the classification. The classification accuracies of Non-Local Means filtered data were in average +10\% higher compared to unfiltered images. The correlation of the co- and quad-polarized decomposition features was high for classes with distinct surface or double bounce scattering and a usage of the co-polarized data is beneficial for regions of natural land coverage and for low vegetation formations with little volume scattering. The evaluation further revealed that the X- and C-Band were most sensitive to the generalized land cover classes. It was found that the X-Band data were sensitive to low vegetation formations with low shrub density, the C-Band data were sensitive to the shrub density and the shrub dominated tundra. In contrast, the L-Band data were less sensitive to the land cover. Among the different dual-polarized data the HH/VV-polarized data were identified to be most meaningful for the characterization and classification, followed by the HH/HV-polarized and the VV/VH-polarized data. The quad-polarized data showed highest sensitivity to the land cover but differences to the co-polarized data were small. The accuracy assessment showed that spectral information was required for accurate land cover classification. The best results were obtained when spectral and radar information was combined. The benefit of including radar data in the classification was up to +15\% accuracy and most significant for the classes wetland and sparse vegetated tundra. The best classifications were realized with quad-polarized C-Band and multispectral data and with co-polarized X-Band and multispectral data. The overall accuracy was up to 80\% for unsupervised and up to 90\% for supervised classifications. The results indicated that the shortwave co-polarized data show promise for the classification of tundra land cover since the polarimetric information is sensitive to low vegetation and the wetlands. Furthermore, co-polarized data provide a higher spatial resolution than the quad-polarized data. The analysis of the intermediate digital elevation model data of the TanDEM-X showed a high potential for the characterization of the surface morphology. The basic and relative topographic features were shown to be of high relevance for the quantification of the surface morphology and an area-wide application is feasible. In addition, these data were of value for the classification and delineation of landforms. Such classifications will assist the delineation of geomorphological units and have potential to identify locations of actual and future morphologic activity.}, subject = {Mackenzie-River-Delta}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Winkler2015, author = {Winkler, Marco}, title = {On the Role of Triadic Substructures in Complex Networks}, publisher = {epubli GmbH}, address = {Berlin}, isbn = {978-3-7375-5654-5}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-116022}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {In the course of the growth of the Internet and due to increasing availability of data, over the last two decades, the field of network science has established itself as an own area of research. With quantitative scientists from computer science, mathematics, and physics working on datasets from biology, economics, sociology, political sciences, and many others, network science serves as a paradigm for interdisciplinary research. One of the major goals in network science is to unravel the relationship between topological graph structure and a network's function. As evidence suggests, systems from the same fields, i.e. with similar function, tend to exhibit similar structure. However, it is still vague whether a similar graph structure automatically implies likewise function. This dissertation aims at helping to bridge this gap, while particularly focusing on the role of triadic structures. After a general introduction to the main concepts of network science, existing work devoted to the relevance of triadic substructures is reviewed. A major challenge in modeling triadic structure is the fact that not all three-node subgraphs can be specified independently of each other, as pairs of nodes may participate in multiple of those triadic subgraphs. In order to overcome this obstacle, we suggest a novel class of generative network models based on so called Steiner triple systems. The latter are partitions of a graph's vertices into pair-disjoint triples (Steiner triples). Thus, the configurations on Steiner triples can be specified independently of each other without overdetermining the network's link structure. Subsequently, we investigate the most basic realization of this new class of models. We call it the triadic random graph model (TRGM). The TRGM is parametrized by a probability distribution over all possible triadic subgraph patterns. In order to generate a network instantiation of the model, for all Steiner triples in the system, a pattern is drawn from the distribution and adjusted randomly on the Steiner triple. We calculate the degree distribution of the TRGM analytically and find it to be similar to a Poissonian distribution. Furthermore, it is shown that TRGMs possess non-trivial triadic structure. We discover inevitable correlations in the abundance of certain triadic subgraph patterns which should be taken into account when attributing functional relevance to particular motifs - patterns which occur significantly more frequently than expected at random. Beyond, the strong impact of the probability distributions on the Steiner triples on the occurrence of triadic subgraphs over the whole network is demonstrated. This interdependence allows us to design ensembles of networks with predefined triadic substructure. Hence, TRGMs help to overcome the lack of generative models needed for assessing the relevance of triadic structure. We further investigate whether motifs occur homogeneously or heterogeneously distributed over a graph. Therefore, we study triadic subgraph structures in each node's neighborhood individually. In order to quantitatively measure structure from an individual node's perspective, we introduce an algorithm for node-specific pattern mining for both directed unsigned, and undirected signed networks. Analyzing real-world datasets, we find that there are networks in which motifs are distributed highly heterogeneously, bound to the proximity of only very few nodes. Moreover, we observe indication for the potential sensitivity of biological systems to a targeted removal of these critical vertices. In addition, we study whole graphs with respect to the homogeneity and homophily of their node-specific triadic structure. The former describes the similarity of subgraph distributions in the neighborhoods of individual vertices. The latter quantifies whether connected vertices are structurally more similar than non-connected ones. We discover these features to be characteristic for the networks' origins. Moreover, clustering the vertices of graphs regarding their triadic structure, we investigate structural groups in the neural network of C. elegans, the international airport-connection network, and the global network of diplomatic sentiments between countries. For the latter we find evidence for the instability of triangles considered socially unbalanced according to sociological theories. Finally, we utilize our TRGM to explore ensembles of networks with similar triadic substructure in terms of the evolution of dynamical processes acting on their nodes. Focusing on oscillators, coupled along the graphs' edges, we observe that certain triad motifs impose a clear signature on the systems' dynamics, even when embedded in a larger network structure.}, subject = {Netzwerk}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hartmann2015, author = {Hartmann, Matthias}, title = {Optimization and Design of Network Architectures for Future Internet Routing}, issn = {1432-8801}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-11416}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-114165}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {At the center of the Internet's protocol stack stands the Internet Protocol (IP) as a common denominator that enables all communication. To make routing efficient, resilient, and scalable, several aspects must be considered. Care must be taken that traffic is well balanced to make efficient use of the existing network resources, both in failure free operation and in failure scenarios. Finding the optimal routing in a network is an NP-complete problem. Therefore, routing optimization is usually performed using heuristics. This dissertation shows that a routing optimized with one objective function is often not good when looking at other objective functions. It can even be worse than unoptimized routing with respect to that objective function. After looking at failure-free routing and traffic distribution in different failure scenarios, the analysis is extended to include the loop-free alternate (LFA) IP fast reroute mechanism. Different application scenarios of LFAs are examined and a special focus is set on the fact that LFAs usually cannot protect all traffic in a network even against single link failures. Thus, the routing optimization for LFAs is targeted on both link utilization and failure coverage. Finally, the pre-congestion notification mechanism PCN for network admission control and overload protection is analyzed and optimized. Different design options for implementing the protocol are compared, before algorithms are developed for the calculation and optimization of protocol parameters and PCN-based routing. The second part of the thesis tackles a routing problem that can only be resolved on a global scale. The scalability of the Internet is at risk since a major and intensifying growth of the interdomain routing tables has been observed. Several protocols and architectures are analyzed that can be used to make interdomain routing more scalable. The most promising approach is the locator/identifier (Loc/ID) split architecture which separates routing from host identification. This way, changes in connectivity, mobility of end hosts, or traffic-engineering activities are hidden from the routing in the core of the Internet and the routing tables can be kept much smaller. All of the currently proposed Loc/ID split approaches have their downsides. In particular, the fact that most architectures use the ID for routing outside the Internet's core is a poor design, which inhibits many of the possible features of a new routing architecture. To better understand the problems and to provide a solution for a scalable routing design that implements a true Loc/ID split, the new GLI-Split protocol is developed in this thesis, which provides separation of global and local routing and uses an ID that is independent from any routing decisions. Besides GLI-Split, several other new routing architectures implementing Loc/ID split have been proposed for the Internet. Most of them assume that a mapping system is queried for EID-to-RLOC mappings by an intermediate node at the border of an edge network. When the mapping system is queried by an intermediate node, packets are already on their way towards their destination, and therefore, the mapping system must be fast, scalable, secure, resilient, and should be able to relay packets without locators to nodes that can forward them to the correct destination. The dissertation develops a classification for all proposed mapping system architectures and shows their similarities and differences. Finally, the fast two-level mapping system FIRMS is developed. It includes security and resilience features as well as a relay service for initial packets of a flow when intermediate nodes encounter a cache miss for the EID-to-RLOC mapping.}, subject = {Netzwerk}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Freiberg2015, author = {Freiberg, Martina}, title = {UI-, User-, \& Usability-Oriented Engineering of Participative Knowledge-Based Systems}, publisher = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, isbn = {978-3-95826-012-2 (print)}, doi = {10.25972/WUP-978-3-95826-013-9}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-106072}, school = {W{\"u}rzburg University Press}, pages = {232}, year = {2015}, abstract = {Knowledge-based systems (KBS) face an ever-increasing interest in various disciplines and contexts. Yet, the former aim to construct the 'perfect intelligent software' continuously shifts to user-centered, participative solutions. Such systems enable users to contribute their personal knowledge to the problem solving process for increased efficiency and an ameliorated user experience. More precisely, we define non-functional key requirements of participative KBS as: Transparency (encompassing KBS status mediation), configurability (user adaptability, degree of user control/exploration), quality of the KB and UI, and evolvability (enabling the KBS to grow mature with their users). Many of those requirements depend on the respective target users, thus calling for a more user-centered development. Often, also highly expertise domains are targeted — inducing highly complex KBs — which requires a more careful and considerate UI/interaction design. Still, current KBS engineering (KBSE) approaches mostly focus on knowledge acquisition (KA) This often leads to non-optimal, little reusable, and non/little evaluated KBS front-end solutions. In this thesis we propose a more encompassing KBSE approach. Due to the strong mutual influences between KB and UI, we suggest a novel form of intertwined UI and KB development. We base the approach on three core components for encompassing KBSE: (1) Extensible prototyping, a tailored form of evolutionary prototyping; this builds on mature UI prototypes and offers two extension steps for the anytime creation of core KBS prototypes (KB + core UI) and fully productive KBS (core KBS prototype + common framing functionality). (2) KBS UI patterns, that define reusable solutions for the core KBS UI/interaction; we provide a basic collection of such patterns in this work. (3) Suitable usability instruments for the assessment of the KBS artifacts. Therewith, we do not strive for 'yet another' self-contained KBS engineering methodology. Rather, we motivate to extend existing approaches by the proposed key components. We demonstrate this based on an agile KBSE model. For practical support, we introduce the tailored KBSE tool ProKEt. ProKEt offers a basic selection of KBS core UI patterns and corresponding configuration options out of the box; their further adaption/extension is possible on various levels of expertise. For practical usability support, ProKEt offers facilities for quantitative and qualitative data collection. ProKEt explicitly fosters the suggested, intertwined development of UI and KB. For seamlessly integrating KA activities, it provides extension points for two selected external KA tools: For KnowOF, a standard office based KA environment. And for KnowWE, a semantic wiki for collaborative KA. Therewith, ProKEt offers powerful support for encompassing, user-centered KBSE. Finally, based on the approach and the tool, we also developed a novel KBS type: Clarification KBS as a mashup of consultation and justification KBS modules. Those denote a specifically suitable realization for participative KBS in highly expertise contexts and consequently require a specific design. In this thesis, apart from more common UI solutions, we particularly also introduce KBS UI patterns especially tailored towards Clarification KBS.}, subject = {Wissensbasiertes System}, language = {en} }