TY - JOUR A1 - Halbig, Andreas A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich T1 - A systematic review of physiological measurements, factors, methods, and applications in virtual reality JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - Measurements of physiological parameters provide an objective, often non-intrusive, and (at least semi-)automatic evaluation and utilization of user behavior. In addition, specific hardware devices of Virtual Reality (VR) often ship with built-in sensors, i.e. eye-tracking and movements sensors. Hence, the combination of physiological measurements and VR applications seems promising. Several approaches have investigated the applicability and benefits of this combination for various fields of applications. However, the range of possible application fields, coupled with potentially useful and beneficial physiological parameters, types of sensor, target variables and factors, and analysis approaches and techniques is manifold. This article provides a systematic overview and an extensive state-of-the-art review of the usage of physiological measurements in VR. We identified 1,119 works that make use of physiological measurements in VR. Within these, we identified 32 approaches that focus on the classification of characteristics of experience, common in VR applications. The first part of this review categorizes the 1,119 works by field of application, i.e. therapy, training, entertainment, and communication and interaction, as well as by the specific target factors and variables measured by the physiological parameters. An additional category summarizes general VR approaches applicable to all specific fields of application since they target typical VR qualities. In the second part of this review, we analyze the target factors and variables regarding the respective methods used for an automatic analysis and, potentially, classification. For example, we highlight which measurement setups have been proven to be sensitive enough to distinguish different levels of arousal, valence, anxiety, stress, or cognitive workload in the virtual realm. This work may prove useful for all researchers wanting to use physiological data in VR and who want to have a good overview of prior approaches taken, their benefits and potential drawbacks. KW - virtual reality KW - use cases KW - sesnsors KW - tools KW - biosignals KW - psychophyisology KW - HMD (Head-Mounted Display) KW - systematic review Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-260503 VL - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Grohmann, Johannes A1 - Herbst, Nikolas A1 - Chalbani, Avi A1 - Arian, Yair A1 - Peretz, Noam A1 - Kounev, Samuel T1 - A Taxonomy of Techniques for SLO Failure Prediction in Software Systems JF - Computers N2 - Failure prediction is an important aspect of self-aware computing systems. Therefore, a multitude of different approaches has been proposed in the literature over the past few years. In this work, we propose a taxonomy for organizing works focusing on the prediction of Service Level Objective (SLO) failures. Our taxonomy classifies related work along the dimensions of the prediction target (e.g., anomaly detection, performance prediction, or failure prediction), the time horizon (e.g., detection or prediction, online or offline application), and the applied modeling type (e.g., time series forecasting, machine learning, or queueing theory). The classification is derived based on a systematic mapping of relevant papers in the area. Additionally, we give an overview of different techniques in each sub-group and address remaining challenges in order to guide future research. KW - taxonomy KW - survey KW - failure prediction KW - anomaly prediction KW - anomaly detection KW - self-aware computing KW - self-adaptive systems KW - performance prediction Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-200594 SN - 2073-431X VL - 9 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Greubel, André A1 - Andres, Daniela A1 - Hennecke, Martin T1 - Analyzing reporting on ransomware incidents: a case study JF - Social Sciences N2 - Knowledge about ransomware is important for protecting sensitive data and for participating in public debates about suitable regulation regarding its security. However, as of now, this topic has received little to no attention in most school curricula. As such, it is desirable to analyze what citizens can learn about this topic outside of formal education, e.g., from news articles. This analysis is both relevant to analyzing the public discourse about ransomware, as well as to identify what aspects of this topic should be included in the limited time available for this topic in formal education. Thus, this paper was motivated both by educational and media research. The central goal is to explore how the media reports on this topic and, additionally, to identify potential misconceptions that could stem from this reporting. To do so, we conducted an exploratory case study into the reporting of 109 media articles regarding a high-impact ransomware event: the shutdown of the Colonial Pipeline (located in the east of the USA). We analyzed how the articles introduced central terminology, what details were provided, what details were not, and what (mis-)conceptions readers might receive from them. Our results show that an introduction of the terminology and technical concepts of security is insufficient for a complete understanding of the incident. Most importantly, the articles may lead to four misconceptions about ransomware that are likely to lead to misleading conclusions about the responsibility for the incident and possible political and technical options to prevent such attacks in the future. KW - media analysis KW - informal education KW - IT security KW - ransomware KW - misconceptions Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-313746 SN - 2076-0760 VL - 12 IS - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Glémarec, Yann A1 - Lugrin, Jean-Luc A1 - Bosser, Anne-Gwenn A1 - Buche, Cédric A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich T1 - Controlling the stage: a high-level control system for virtual audiences in Virtual Reality JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - This article presents a novel method for controlling a virtual audience system (VAS) in Virtual Reality (VR) application, called STAGE, which has been originally designed for supervised public speaking training in university seminars dedicated to the preparation and delivery of scientific talks. We are interested in creating pedagogical narratives: narratives encompass affective phenomenon and rather than organizing events changing the course of a training scenario, pedagogical plans using our system focus on organizing the affects it arouses for the trainees. Efficiently controlling a virtual audience towards a specific training objective while evaluating the speaker’s performance presents a challenge for a seminar instructor: the high level of cognitive and physical demands required to be able to control the virtual audience, whilst evaluating speaker’s performance, adjusting and allowing it to quickly react to the user’s behaviors and interactions. It is indeed a critical limitation of a number of existing systems that they rely on a Wizard of Oz approach, where the tutor drives the audience in reaction to the user’s performance. We address this problem by integrating with a VAS a high-level control component for tutors, which allows using predefined audience behavior rules, defining custom ones, as well as intervening during run-time for finer control of the unfolding of the pedagogical plan. At its core, this component offers a tool to program, select, modify and monitor interactive training narratives using a high-level representation. The STAGE offers the following features: i) a high-level API to program pedagogical narratives focusing on a specific public speaking situation and training objectives, ii) an interactive visualization interface iii) computation and visualization of user metrics, iv) a semi-autonomous virtual audience composed of virtual spectators with automatic reactions to the speaker and surrounding spectators while following the pedagogical plan V) and the possibility for the instructor to embody a virtual spectator to ask questions or guide the speaker from within the Virtual Environment. We present here the design, and implementation of the tutoring system and its integration in STAGE, and discuss its reception by end-users. KW - virtual reality KW - virtual agent KW - behavior perception KW - public speaking KW - education Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-284601 SN - 2673-4192 VL - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gehrke, Alexander A1 - Balbach, Nico A1 - Rauch, Yong-Mi A1 - Degkwitz, Andreas A1 - Puppe, Frank T1 - Erkennung von handschriftlichen Unterstreichungen in Alten Drucken JF - Bibliothek Forschung und Praxis N2 - Die Erkennung handschriftlicher Artefakte wie Unterstreichungen in Buchdrucken ermöglicht Rückschlüsse auf das Rezeptionsverhalten und die Provenienzgeschichte und wird auch für eine OCR benötigt. Dabei soll zwischen handschriftlichen Unterstreichungen und waagerechten Linien im Druck (z. B. Trennlinien usw.) unterschieden werden, da letztere nicht ausgezeichnet werden sollen. Im Beitrag wird ein Ansatz basierend auf einem auf Unterstreichungen trainierten Neuronalen Netz gemäß der U-Net Architektur vorgestellt, dessen Ergebnisse in einem zweiten Schritt mit heuristischen Regeln nachbearbeitet werden. Die Evaluationen zeigen, dass Unterstreichungen sehr gut erkannt werden, wenn bei der Binarisierung der Scans nicht zu viele Pixel der Unterstreichung wegen geringem Kontrast verloren gehen. Zukünftig sollen die Worte oberhalb der Unterstreichung mit OCR transkribiert werden und auch andere Artefakte wie handschriftliche Notizen in alten Drucken erkannt werden. N2 - The recognition of handwritten artefacts like underlines in historical printings allows inference on the reception and provenance history and is necessary for OCR (optical character recognition). In this context it is important to differentiate between handwritten and printed lines, since the latter are common in printings, but should be ignored. We present an approach based on neural nets with the U-Net architecture, whose segmentation results are post processed with heuristic rules. The evaluations show that handwritten underlines are very well recognized if the binarisation of the scans is adequate. Future work includes transcription of the underlined words with OCR and recognition of other artefacts like handwritten notes in historical printings. T2 - Recognition of handwritten underlines in historical printings KW - Brüder Grimm Privatbibliothek KW - Erkennung handschriftlicher Artefakte KW - Convolutional Neural Network KW - regelbasierte Nachbearbeitung KW - Grimm brothers personal library KW - handwritten artefact recognition KW - convolutional neural network KW - rule based post processing Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-193377 SN - 1865-7648 SN - 0341-4183 N1 - Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG-geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugänglich. VL - 43 IS - 3 SP - 447 EP - 452 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gageik, Nils A1 - Strohmeier, Michael A1 - Montenegro, Sergio T1 - Waypoint flight parameter comparison of an autonomous UAV JF - International Journal of Artificial Intelligence & Applications (IJAIA) N2 - The present paper compares the effect of different waypoint parameters on the flight performance of a special autonomous indoor UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) fusing ultrasonic, inertial, pressure and optical sensors for 3D positioning and controlling. The investigated parameters are the acceptance threshold for reaching a waypoint as well as the maximal waypoint step size or block size. The effect of these parameters on the flight time and accuracy of the flight path is investigated. Therefore the paper addresses how the acceptance threshold and step size influence the speed and accuracy of the autonomous flight and thus influence the performance of the presented autonomous quadrocopter under real indoor navigation circumstances. Furthermore the paper demonstrates a drawback of the standard potential field method for navigation of such autonomous quadrocopters and points to an improvement. KW - autonomous UAV KW - Quadrocopter KW - Quadrotor KW - waypoint parameter KW - navigation Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-96833 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gageik, Nils A1 - Strohmeier, Michael A1 - Montenegro, Sergio T1 - An Autonomous UAV with an Optical Flow Sensor for Positioning and Navigation JF - International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems N2 - A procedure to control all six DOF (degrees of freedom) of a UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) without an external reference system and to enable fully autonomous flight is presented here. For 2D positioning the principle of optical flow is used. Together with the output of height estimation, fusing ultrasonic, infrared and inertial and pressure sensor data, the 3D position of the UAV can be computed, controlled and steered. All data processing is done on the UAV. An external computer with a pathway planning interface is for commanding purposes only. The presented system is part of the AQopterI8 project, which aims to develop an autonomous flying quadrocopter for indoor application. The focus of this paper is 2D positioning using an optical flow sensor. As a result of the performed evaluation, it can be concluded that for position hold, the standard deviation of the position error is 10cm and after landing the position error is about 30cm. KW - Autonomous UAV KW - Quadrocopter KW - Quadrotor KW - Optical Flow KW - positioning KW - navigation Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-96368 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fischer, Norbert A1 - Hartelt, Alexander A1 - Puppe, Frank T1 - Line-level layout recognition of historical documents with background knowledge JF - Algorithms N2 - Digitization and transcription of historic documents offer new research opportunities for humanists and are the topics of many edition projects. However, manual work is still required for the main phases of layout recognition and the subsequent optical character recognition (OCR) of early printed documents. This paper describes and evaluates how deep learning approaches recognize text lines and can be extended to layout recognition using background knowledge. The evaluation was performed on five corpora of early prints from the 15th and 16th Centuries, representing a variety of layout features. While the main text with standard layouts could be recognized in the correct reading order with a precision and recall of up to 99.9%, also complex layouts were recognized at a rate as high as 90% by using background knowledge, the full potential of which was revealed if many pages of the same source were transcribed. KW - layout recognition KW - background knowledge KW - historical document analysis KW - fully convolutional neural networks KW - baseline detection KW - text line detection Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-310938 SN - 1999-4893 VL - 16 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Döllinger, Nina A1 - Wienrich, Carolin A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich T1 - Challenges and opportunities of immersive technologies for mindfulness meditation: a systematic review JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - Mindfulness is considered an important factor of an individual's subjective well-being. Consequently, Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) has investigated approaches that strengthen mindfulness, i.e., by inventing multimedia technologies to support mindfulness meditation. These approaches often use smartphones, tablets, or consumer-grade desktop systems to allow everyday usage in users' private lives or in the scope of organized therapies. Virtual, Augmented, and Mixed Reality (VR, AR, MR; in short: XR) significantly extend the design space for such approaches. XR covers a wide range of potential sensory stimulation, perceptive and cognitive manipulations, content presentation, interaction, and agency. These facilities are linked to typical XR-specific perceptions that are conceptually closely related to mindfulness research, such as (virtual) presence and (virtual) embodiment. However, a successful exploitation of XR that strengthens mindfulness requires a systematic analysis of the potential interrelation and influencing mechanisms between XR technology, its properties, factors, and phenomena and existing models and theories of the construct of mindfulness. This article reports such a systematic analysis of XR-related research from HCI and life sciences to determine the extent to which existing research frameworks on HCI and mindfulness can be applied to XR technologies, the potential of XR technologies to support mindfulness, and open research gaps. Fifty papers of ACM Digital Library and National Institutes of Health's National Library of Medicine (PubMed) with and without empirical efficacy evaluation were included in our analysis. The results reveal that at the current time, empirical research on XR-based mindfulness support mainly focuses on therapy and therapeutic outcomes. Furthermore, most of the currently investigated XR-supported mindfulness interactions are limited to vocally guided meditations within nature-inspired virtual environments. While an analysis of empirical research on those systems did not reveal differences in mindfulness compared to non-mediated mindfulness practices, various design proposals illustrate that XR has the potential to provide interactive and body-based innovations for mindfulness practice. We propose a structured approach for future work to specify and further explore the potential of XR as mindfulness-support. The resulting framework provides design guidelines for XR-based mindfulness support based on the elements and psychological mechanisms of XR interactions. KW - virtual reality KW - augmented reality KW - mindfulness KW - XR KW - meditation Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-259047 VL - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dumic, Emil A1 - Bjelopera, Anamaria A1 - Nüchter, Andreas T1 - Dynamic point cloud compression based on projections, surface reconstruction and video compression JF - Sensors N2 - In this paper we will present a new dynamic point cloud compression based on different projection types and bit depth, combined with the surface reconstruction algorithm and video compression for obtained geometry and texture maps. Texture maps have been compressed after creating Voronoi diagrams. Used video compression is specific for geometry (FFV1) and texture (H.265/HEVC). Decompressed point clouds are reconstructed using a Poisson surface reconstruction algorithm. Comparison with the original point clouds was performed using point-to-point and point-to-plane measures. Comprehensive experiments show better performance for some projection maps: cylindrical, Miller and Mercator projections. KW - 3DTK toolkit KW - map projections KW - point cloud compression KW - point-to-point measure KW - point-to-plane measure KW - Poisson surface reconstruction KW - octree Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-252231 SN - 1424-8220 VL - 22 IS - 1 ER -