TY - JOUR A1 - Landeck, Maximilian A1 - Alvarez Igarzábal, Federico A1 - Unruh, Fabian A1 - Habenicht, Hannah A1 - Khoshnoud, Shiva A1 - Wittmann, Marc A1 - Lugrin, Jean-Luc A1 - Latoschik, Marc Erich T1 - Journey through a virtual tunnel: Simulated motion and its effects on the experience of time JF - Frontiers in Virtual Reality N2 - This paper examines the relationship between time and motion perception in virtual environments. Previous work has shown that the perception of motion can affect the perception of time. We developed a virtual environment that simulates motion in a tunnel and measured its effects on the estimation of the duration of time, the speed at which perceived time passes, and the illusion of self-motion, also known as vection. When large areas of the visual field move in the same direction, vection can occur; observers often perceive this as self-motion rather than motion of the environment. To generate different levels of vection and investigate its effects on time perception, we developed an abstract procedural tunnel generator. The generator can simulate different speeds and densities of tunnel sections (visibly distinguishable sections that form the virtual tunnel), as well as the degree of embodiment of the user avatar (with or without virtual hands). We exposed participants to various tunnel simulations with different durations, speeds, and densities in a remote desktop and a virtual reality (VR) laboratory study. Time passed subjectively faster under high-speed and high-density conditions in both studies. The experience of self-motion was also stronger under high-speed and high-density conditions. Both studies revealed a significant correlation between the perceived passage of time and perceived self-motion. Subjects in the virtual reality study reported a stronger self-motion experience, a faster perceived passage of time, and shorter time estimates than subjects in the desktop study. Our results suggest that a virtual tunnel simulation can manipulate time perception in virtual reality. We will explore these results for the development of virtual reality applications for therapeutic approaches in our future work. This could be particularly useful in treating disorders like depression, autism, and schizophrenia, which are known to be associated with distortions in time perception. For example, the tunnel could be therapeutically applied by resetting patients’ time perceptions by exposing them to the tunnel under different conditions, such as increasing or decreasing perceived time. KW - passage of time KW - illusion of self-motion KW - vection KW - virtual tunnel KW - therapeutic application KW - virtual reality KW - extended reality (XR) Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-301519 SN - 2673-4192 VL - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Holfelder, Marc A1 - Mulansky, Lena A1 - Schlee, Winfried A1 - Baumeister, Harald A1 - Schobel, Johannes A1 - Greger, Helmut A1 - Hoff, Andreas A1 - Pryss, Rüdiger T1 - Medical device regulation efforts for mHealth apps during the COVID-19 pandemic — an experience report of Corona Check and Corona Health JF - J — Multidisciplinary Scientific Journal N2 - Within the healthcare environment, mobile health (mHealth) applications (apps) are becoming more and more important. The number of new mHealth apps has risen steadily in the last years. Especially the COVID-19 pandemic has led to an enormous amount of app releases. In most countries, mHealth applications have to be compliant with several regulatory aspects to be declared a “medical app”. However, the latest applicable medical device regulation (MDR) does not provide more details on the requirements for mHealth applications. When developing a medical app, it is essential that all contributors in an interdisciplinary team — especially software engineers — are aware of the specific regulatory requirements beforehand. The development process, however, should not be stalled due to integration of the MDR. Therefore, a developing framework that includes these aspects is required to facilitate a reliable and quick development process. The paper at hand introduces the creation of such a framework on the basis of the Corona Health and Corona Check apps. The relevant regulatory guidelines are listed and summarized as a guidance for medical app developments during the pandemic and beyond. In particular, the important stages and challenges faced that emerged during the entire development process are highlighted. KW - mHealth KW - mobile application KW - MDR KW - medical device regulation KW - medical device software Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-285434 SN - 2571-8800 VL - 4 IS - 2 SP - 206 EP - 222 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Obremski, David A1 - Friedrich, Paula A1 - Haak, Nora A1 - Schaper, Philipp A1 - Lugrin, Birgit T1 - The impact of mixed-cultural speech on the stereotypical perception of a virtual robot JF - Frontiers in Robotics and AI N2 - Despite the fact that mixed-cultural backgrounds become of increasing importance in our daily life, the representation of multiple cultural backgrounds in one entity is still rare in socially interactive agents (SIAs). This paper’s contribution is twofold. First, it provides a survey of research on mixed-cultured SIAs. Second, it presents a study investigating how mixed-cultural speech (in this case, non-native accent) influences how a virtual robot is perceived in terms of personality, warmth, competence and credibility. Participants with English or German respectively as their first language watched a video of a virtual robot speaking in either standard English or German-accented English. It was expected that the German-accented speech would be rated more positively by native German participants as well as elicit the German stereotypes credibility and conscientiousness for both German and English participants. Contrary to the expectations, German participants rated the virtual robot lower in terms of competence and credibility when it spoke with a German accent, whereas English participants perceived the virtual robot with a German accent as more credible compared to the version without an accent. Both the native English and native German listeners classified the virtual robot with a German accent as significantly more neurotic than the virtual robot speaking standard English. This work shows that by solely implementing a non-native accent in a virtual robot, stereotypes are partly transferred. It also shows that the implementation of a non-native accent leads to differences in the perception of the virtual robot. KW - non-native accent KW - social robotics KW - intelligent virtual agents KW - stereotypes KW - mixed-cultural KW - culturally aware KW - socially interactive agents Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-293531 SN - 2296-9144 VL - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tsoulias, Nikos A1 - Jörissen, Sven A1 - Nüchter, Andreas T1 - An approach for monitoring temperature on fruit surface by means of thermal point cloud JF - MethodsX N2 - Heat and excessive solar radiation can produce abiotic stresses during apple maturation, resulting fruit quality. Therefore, the monitoring of temperature on fruit surface (FST) over the growing period can allow to identify thresholds, above of which several physiological disorders such as sunburn may occur in apple. The current approaches neglect spatial variation of FST and have reduced repeatability, resulting in unreliable predictions. In this study, LiDAR laser scanning and thermal imaging were employed to detect the temperature on fruit surface by means of 3D point cloud. A process for calibrating the two sensors based on an active board target and producing a 3D thermal point cloud was suggested. After calibration, the sensor system was utilised to scan the fruit trees, while temperature values assigned in the corresponding 3D point cloud were based on the extrinsic calibration. Whereas a fruit detection algorithm was performed to segment the FST from each apple. • The approach allows the calibration of LiDAR laser scanner with thermal camera in order to produce a 3D thermal point cloud. • The method can be applied in apple trees for segmenting FST in 3D. Whereas the approach can be utilised to predict several physiological disorders including sunburn on fruit surface. KW - point cloud KW - thermal point cloud KW - fruit temperature KW - sunburn KW - food quality KW - precision horticulture Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-300270 SN - 2215-0161 VL - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Seufert, Anika A1 - Poignée, Fabian A1 - Hoßfeld, Tobias A1 - Seufert, Michael T1 - Pandemic in the digital age: analyzing WhatsApp communication behavior before, during, and after the COVID-19 lockdown JF - Humanities and Social Sciences Communications N2 - The strict restrictions introduced by the COVID-19 lockdowns, which started from March 2020, changed people’s daily lives and habits on many different levels. In this work, we investigate the impact of the lockdown on the communication behavior in the mobile instant messaging application WhatsApp. Our evaluations are based on a large dataset of 2577 private chat histories with 25,378,093 messages from 51,973 users. The analysis of the one-to-one and group conversations confirms that the lockdown severely altered the communication in WhatsApp chats compared to pre-pandemic time ranges. In particular, we observe short-term effects, which caused an increased message frequency in the first lockdown months and a shifted communication activity during the day in March and April 2020. Moreover, we also see long-term effects of the ongoing pandemic situation until February 2021, which indicate a change of communication behavior towards more regular messaging, as well as a persisting change in activity during the day. The results of our work show that even anonymized chat histories can tell us a lot about people’s behavior and especially behavioral changes during the COVID-19 pandemic and thus are of great relevance for behavioral researchers. Furthermore, looking at the pandemic from an Internet provider perspective, these insights can be used during the next pandemic, or if the current COVID-19 situation worsens, to adapt communication networks to the changed usage behavior early on and thus avoid network congestion. KW - cultural and media studies KW - information systems and information technology KW - science, technology and society Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-300261 VL - 9 ER - TY - RPRT A1 - Herrmann, Martin A1 - Rizk, Amr T1 - On Data Plane Multipath Scheduling for Connected Mobility Applications T2 - KuVS Fachgespräch - Würzburg Workshop on Modeling, Analysis and Simulation of Next-Generation Communication Networks 2023 (WueWoWAS’23) N2 - Cooperative, connected and automated mobility (CCAM) systems depend on a reliable communication to provide their service and more crucially to ensure the safety of users. One way to ensure the reliability of a data transmission is to use multiple transmission technologies in combination with redundant flows. In this paper, we describe a system requiring multipath communication in the context of CCAM. To this end, we introduce a data plane-based scheduler that uses replication and integration modules to provide redundant and transparent multipath communication. We provide an analytical model for the full replication module of the system and give an overview of how and where the data-plane scheduler components can be realized. KW - multipath scheduling KW - connected mobility applications Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-322033 N1 - Aktualisierte Version unter https://doi.org/10.25972/OPUS-35344 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Müller, Konstantin A1 - Leppich, Robert A1 - Geiß, Christian A1 - Borst, Vanessa A1 - Pelizari, Patrick Aravena A1 - Kounev, Samuel A1 - Taubenböck, Hannes T1 - Deep neural network regression for normalized digital surface model generation with Sentinel-2 imagery JF - IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing N2 - In recent history, normalized digital surface models (nDSMs) have been constantly gaining importance as a means to solve large-scale geographic problems. High-resolution surface models are precious, as they can provide detailed information for a specific area. However, measurements with a high resolution are time consuming and costly. Only a few approaches exist to create high-resolution nDSMs for extensive areas. This article explores approaches to extract high-resolution nDSMs from low-resolution Sentinel-2 data, allowing us to derive large-scale models. We thereby utilize the advantages of Sentinel 2 being open access, having global coverage, and providing steady updates through a high repetition rate. Several deep learning models are trained to overcome the gap in producing high-resolution surface maps from low-resolution input data. With U-Net as a base architecture, we extend the capabilities of our model by integrating tailored multiscale encoders with differently sized kernels in the convolution as well as conformed self-attention inside the skip connection gates. Using pixelwise regression, our U-Net base models can achieve a mean height error of approximately 2 m. Moreover, through our enhancements to the model architecture, we reduce the model error by more than 7%. KW - Deep learning KW - multiscale encoder KW - sentinel KW - surface model Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-349424 SN - 1939-1404 VL - 16 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Liman, Leon A1 - May, Bernd A1 - Fette, Georg A1 - Krebs, Jonathan A1 - Puppe, Frank T1 - Using a clinical data warehouse to calculate and present key metrics for the radiology department: implementation and performance evaluation JF - JMIR Medical Informatics N2 - Background: Due to the importance of radiologic examinations, such as X-rays or computed tomography scans, for many clinical diagnoses, the optimal use of the radiology department is 1 of the primary goals of many hospitals. Objective: This study aims to calculate the key metrics of this use by creating a radiology data warehouse solution, where data from radiology information systems (RISs) can be imported and then queried using a query language as well as a graphical user interface (GUI). Methods: Using a simple configuration file, the developed system allowed for the processing of radiology data exported from any kind of RIS into a Microsoft Excel, comma-separated value (CSV), or JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) file. These data were then imported into a clinical data warehouse. Additional values based on the radiology data were calculated during this import process by implementing 1 of several provided interfaces. Afterward, the query language and GUI of the data warehouse were used to configure and calculate reports on these data. For the most common types of requested reports, a web interface was created to view their numbers as graphics. Results: The tool was successfully tested with the data of 4 different German hospitals from 2018 to 2021, with a total of 1,436,111 examinations. The user feedback was good, since all their queries could be answered if the available data were sufficient. The initial processing of the radiology data for using them with the clinical data warehouse took (depending on the amount of data provided by each hospital) between 7 minutes and 1 hour 11 minutes. Calculating 3 reports of different complexities on the data of each hospital was possible in 1-3 seconds for reports with up to 200 individual calculations and in up to 1.5 minutes for reports with up to 8200 individual calculations. Conclusions: A system was developed with the main advantage of being generic concerning the export of different RISs as well as concerning the configuration of queries for various reports. The queries could be configured easily using the GUI of the data warehouse, and their results could be exported into the standard formats Excel and CSV for further processing. KW - data warehouse KW - eHealth KW - hospital data KW - electronic health records KW - radiology KW - statistics and numerical data KW - medical records Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-349411 SN - 2291-9694 VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Seufert, Anika A1 - Poignée, Fabian A1 - Seufert, Michael A1 - Hoßfeld, Tobias T1 - Share and multiply: modeling communication and generated traffic in private WhatsApp groups JF - IEEE Access N2 - Group-based communication is a highly popular communication paradigm, which is especially prominent in mobile instant messaging (MIM) applications, such as WhatsApp. Chat groups in MIM applications facilitate the sharing of various types of messages (e.g., text, voice, image, video) among a large number of participants. As each message has to be transmitted to every other member of the group, which multiplies the traffic, this has a massive impact on the underlying communication networks. However, most chat groups are private and network operators cannot obtain deep insights into MIM communication via network measurements due to end-to-end encryption. Thus, the generation of traffic is not well understood, given that it depends on sizes of communication groups, speed of communication, and exchanged message types. In this work, we provide a huge data set of 5,956 private WhatsApp chat histories, which contains over 76 million messages from more than 117,000 users. We describe and model the properties of chat groups and users, and the communication within these chat groups, which gives unprecedented insights into private MIM communication. In addition, we conduct exemplary measurements for the most popular message types, which empower the provided models to estimate the traffic over time in a chat group. KW - communication models KW - group-based communication KW - mobile instant messaging KW - mobile messaging application KW - private chat groups KW - WhatsApp Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-349430 VL - 11 ER - TY - RPRT A1 - Herrmann, Martin A1 - Rizk, Amr T1 - On Data Plane Multipath Scheduling for Connected Mobility Applications T2 - KuVS Fachgespräch - Würzburg Workshop on Modeling, Analysis and Simulation of Next-Generation Communication Networks 2023 (WueWoWAS’23) N2 - Cooperative, connected and automated mobility (CCAM) systems depend on a reliable communication to provide their service and more crucially to ensure the safety of users. One way to ensure the reliability of a data transmission is to use multiple transmission technologies in combination with redundant flows. In this paper, we describe a system requiring multipath communication in the context of CCAM. To this end, we introduce a data plane-based scheduler that uses replication and integration modules to provide redundant and transparent multipath communication. We provide an analytical model for the full replication module of the system and give an overview of how and where the data-plane scheduler components can be realized. KW - multipath scheduling KW - connected mobility applications Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-353444 N1 - Ursprüngliche Version unter https://doi.org/10.25972/OPUS-32203 ET - aktualisierte Version ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Krenzer, Adrian A1 - Heil, Stefan A1 - Fitting, Daniel A1 - Matti, Safa A1 - Zoller, Wolfram G. A1 - Hann, Alexander A1 - Puppe, Frank T1 - Automated classification of polyps using deep learning architectures and few-shot learning JF - BMC Medical Imaging N2 - Background Colorectal cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. The best method to prevent CRC is a colonoscopy. However, not all colon polyps have the risk of becoming cancerous. Therefore, polyps are classified using different classification systems. After the classification, further treatment and procedures are based on the classification of the polyp. Nevertheless, classification is not easy. Therefore, we suggest two novel automated classifications system assisting gastroenterologists in classifying polyps based on the NICE and Paris classification. Methods We build two classification systems. One is classifying polyps based on their shape (Paris). The other classifies polyps based on their texture and surface patterns (NICE). A two-step process for the Paris classification is introduced: First, detecting and cropping the polyp on the image, and secondly, classifying the polyp based on the cropped area with a transformer network. For the NICE classification, we design a few-shot learning algorithm based on the Deep Metric Learning approach. The algorithm creates an embedding space for polyps, which allows classification from a few examples to account for the data scarcity of NICE annotated images in our database. Results For the Paris classification, we achieve an accuracy of 89.35 %, surpassing all papers in the literature and establishing a new state-of-the-art and baseline accuracy for other publications on a public data set. For the NICE classification, we achieve a competitive accuracy of 81.13 % and demonstrate thereby the viability of the few-shot learning paradigm in polyp classification in data-scarce environments. Additionally, we show different ablations of the algorithms. Finally, we further elaborate on the explainability of the system by showing heat maps of the neural network explaining neural activations. Conclusion Overall we introduce two polyp classification systems to assist gastroenterologists. We achieve state-of-the-art performance in the Paris classification and demonstrate the viability of the few-shot learning paradigm in the NICE classification, addressing the prevalent data scarcity issues faced in medical machine learning. KW - machine learning KW - deep learning KW - endoscopy KW - gastroenterology KW - automation KW - image classification KW - transformer KW - deep metric learning KW - few-shot learning Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-357465 VL - 23 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bayer, Daniel A1 - Pruckner, Marco T1 - A digital twin of a local energy system based on real smart meter data JF - Energy Informatics N2 - The steadily increasing usage of smart meters generates a valuable amount of high-resolution data about the individual energy consumption and production of local energy systems. Private households install more and more photovoltaic systems, battery storage and big consumers like heat pumps. Thus, our vision is to augment these collected smart meter time series of a complete system (e.g., a city, town or complex institutions like airports) with simulatively added previously named components. We, therefore, propose a novel digital twin of such an energy system based solely on a complete set of smart meter data including additional building data. Based on the additional geospatial data, the twin is intended to represent the addition of the abovementioned components as realistically as possible. Outputs of the twin can be used as a decision support for either system operators where to strengthen the system or for individual households where and how to install photovoltaic systems and batteries. Meanwhile, the first local energy system operators had such smart meter data of almost all residential consumers for several years. We acquire those of an exemplary operator and discuss a case study presenting some features of our digital twin and highlighting the value of the combination of smart meter and geospatial data. KW - digital twin KW - simulation KW - local energy system KW - decision support system KW - smart meter data utilization KW - future energy grid exploration Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-357456 VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hentschel, Simon A1 - Kobs, Konstantin A1 - Hotho, Andreas T1 - CLIP knows image aesthetics JF - Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence N2 - Most Image Aesthetic Assessment (IAA) methods use a pretrained ImageNet classification model as a base to fine-tune. We hypothesize that content classification is not an optimal pretraining task for IAA, since the task discourages the extraction of features that are useful for IAA, e.g., composition, lighting, or style. On the other hand, we argue that the Contrastive Language-Image Pretraining (CLIP) model is a better base for IAA models, since it has been trained using natural language supervision. Due to the rich nature of language, CLIP needs to learn a broad range of image features that correlate with sentences describing the image content, composition, environments, and even subjective feelings about the image. While it has been shown that CLIP extracts features useful for content classification tasks, its suitability for tasks that require the extraction of style-based features like IAA has not yet been shown. We test our hypothesis by conducting a three-step study, investigating the usefulness of features extracted by CLIP compared to features obtained from the last layer of a comparable ImageNet classification model. In each step, we get more computationally expensive. First, we engineer natural language prompts that let CLIP assess an image's aesthetic without adjusting any weights in the model. To overcome the challenge that CLIP's prompting only is applicable to classification tasks, we propose a simple but effective strategy to convert multiple prompts to a continuous scalar as required when predicting an image's mean aesthetic score. Second, we train a linear regression on the AVA dataset using image features obtained by CLIP's image encoder. The resulting model outperforms a linear regression trained on features from an ImageNet classification model. It also shows competitive performance with fully fine-tuned networks based on ImageNet, while only training a single layer. Finally, by fine-tuning CLIP's image encoder on the AVA dataset, we show that CLIP only needs a fraction of training epochs to converge, while also performing better than a fine-tuned ImageNet model. Overall, our experiments suggest that CLIP is better suited as a base model for IAA methods than ImageNet pretrained networks. KW - Image Aesthetic Assessment KW - CLIP KW - language-image pre-training KW - text supervision KW - prompt engineering KW - AVA Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-297150 SN - 2624-8212 VL - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gupta, Shishir K. A1 - Minocha, Rashmi A1 - Thapa, Prithivi Jung A1 - Srivastava, Mugdha A1 - Dandekar, Thomas T1 - Role of the pangolin in origin of SARS-CoV-2: an evolutionary perspective JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences N2 - After the recent emergence of SARS-CoV-2 infection, unanswered questions remain related to its evolutionary history, path of transmission or divergence and role of recombination. There is emerging evidence on amino acid substitutions occurring in key residues of the receptor-binding domain of the spike glycoprotein in coronavirus isolates from bat and pangolins. In this article, we summarize our current knowledge on the origin of SARS-CoV-2. We also analyze the host ACE2-interacting residues of the receptor-binding domain of spike glycoprotein in SARS-CoV-2 isolates from bats, and compare it to pangolin SARS-CoV-2 isolates collected from Guangdong province (GD Pangolin-CoV) and Guangxi autonomous regions (GX Pangolin-CoV) of South China. Based on our comparative analysis, we support the view that the Guangdong Pangolins are the intermediate hosts that adapted the SARS-CoV-2 and represented a significant evolutionary link in the path of transmission of SARS-CoV-2 virus. We also discuss the role of intermediate hosts in the origin of Omicron. KW - COVID-19 KW - SARS-CoV-2 KW - origin KW - evolution KW - intermediate host KW - pangolin KW - mutation KW - recombination KW - adaptation KW - transmission KW - comparative sequence analysis Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-285995 SN - 1422-0067 VL - 23 IS - 16 ER - TY - THES A1 - Bleier, Michael T1 - Underwater Laser Scanning - Refractive Calibration, Self-calibration and Mapping for 3D Reconstruction T1 - Laserscanning unter Wasser - Refraktive Kalibrierung, Selbstkalibrierung und Kartierung zur 3D Rekonstruktion N2 - There is great interest in affordable, precise and reliable metrology underwater: Archaeologists want to document artifacts in situ with high detail. In marine research, biologists require the tools to monitor coral growth and geologists need recordings to model sediment transport. Furthermore, for offshore construction projects, maintenance and inspection millimeter-accurate measurements of defects and offshore structures are essential. While the process of digitizing individual objects and complete sites on land is well understood and standard methods, such as Structure from Motion or terrestrial laser scanning, are regularly applied, precise underwater surveying with high resolution is still a complex and difficult task. Applying optical scanning techniques in water is challenging due to reduced visibility caused by turbidity and light absorption. However, optical underwater scanners provide significant advantages in terms of achievable resolution and accuracy compared to acoustic systems. This thesis proposes an underwater laser scanning system and the algorithms for creating dense and accurate 3D scans in water. It is based on laser triangulation and the main optical components are an underwater camera and a cross-line laser projector. The prototype is configured with a motorized yaw axis for capturing scans from a tripod. Alternatively, it is mounted to a moving platform for mobile mapping. The main focus lies on the refractive calibration of the underwater camera and laser projector, the image processing and 3D reconstruction. For highest accuracy, the refraction at the individual media interfaces must be taken into account. This is addressed by an optimization-based calibration framework using a physical-geometric camera model derived from an analytical formulation of a ray-tracing projection model. In addition to scanning underwater structures, this work presents the 3D acquisition of semi-submerged structures and the correction of refraction effects. As in-situ calibration in water is complex and time-consuming, the challenge of transferring an in-air scanner calibration to water without re-calibration is investigated, as well as self-calibration techniques for structured light. The system was successfully deployed in various configurations for both static scanning and mobile mapping. An evaluation of the calibration and 3D reconstruction using reference objects and a comparison of free-form surfaces in clear water demonstrate the high accuracy potential in the range of one millimeter to less than one centimeter, depending on the measurement distance. Mobile underwater mapping and motion compensation based on visual-inertial odometry is demonstrated using a new optical underwater scanner based on fringe projection. Continuous registration of individual scans allows the acquisition of 3D models from an underwater vehicle. RGB images captured in parallel are used to create 3D point clouds of underwater scenes in full color. 3D maps are useful to the operator during the remote control of underwater vehicles and provide the building blocks to enable offshore inspection and surveying tasks. The advancing automation of the measurement technology will allow non-experts to use it, significantly reduce acquisition time and increase accuracy, making underwater metrology more cost-effective. N2 - Das Interesse an präziser, zuverlässiger und zugleich kostengünstiger Unterwassermesstechnik ist groß. Beispielsweise wollen Archäologen Artefakte in situ mit hoher Detailtreue dokumentieren und in der Meeresforschung benötigen Biologen Messwerkzeuge zur Beobachtung des Korallenwachstums. Auch Geologen sind auf Messdaten angewiesen, um Sedimenttransporte zu modellieren. Darüber hinaus ist für die Errichtung von Offshore-Bauwerken, sowie deren Wartung und Inspektion eine millimetergenaue Vermessung von vorhandenen Strukturen und Defekten unerlässlich. Während die Digitalisierung einzelner Objekte und ganzer Areale an Land gut erforscht ist und verschiedene Standardmethoden, wie zum Beispiel Structure from Motion oder terrestrisches Laserscanning, regelmäßig eingesetzt werden, ist die präzise und hochauflösende Unterwasservermessung nach wie vor eine komplexe und schwierige Aufgabe. Die Anwendung optischer Messtechnik im Wasser ist aufgrund der eingeschränkten Sichttiefe durch Trübung und Lichtabsorption eine Herausforderung. Optische Unterwasserscanner bieten jedoch Vorteile hinsichtlich der erreichbaren Auflösung und Genauigkeit gegenüber akustischen Systemen. In dieser Arbeit werden ein Unterwasser-Laserscanning-System und die Algorithmen zur Erzeugung von 3D-Scans mit hoher Punktdichte im Wasser vorgestellt. Es basiert auf Lasertriangulation und die optischen Hauptkomponenten sind eine Unterwasserkamera und ein Kreuzlinienlaserprojektor. Das System ist mit einer motorisierten Drehachse ausgestattet, um Scans von einem Stativ aus aufzunehmen. Alternativ kann es von einer beweglichen Plattform aus für mobile Kartierung eingesetzt werden. Das Hauptaugenmerk liegt auf der refraktiven Kalibrierung der Unterwasserkamera und des Laserprojektors, der Bildverarbeitung und der 3D-Rekonstruktion. Um höchste Genauigkeit zu erreichen, muss die Brechung an den einzelnen Medienübergängen berücksichtigt werden. Dies wird durch ein physikalisch-geometrisches Kameramodell, das auf einer analytischen Beschreibung der Strahlenverfolgung basiert, und ein optimierungsbasiertes Kalibrierverfahren erreicht. Neben dem Scannen von Unterwasserstrukturen wird in dieser Arbeit auch die 3D-Erfassung von teilweise im Wasser befindlichen Strukturen und die Korrektur der dabei auftretenden Brechungseffekte vorgestellt. Da die Kalibrierung im Wasser komplex und zeitintensiv ist, wird die Übertragung einer Kalibrierung des Scanners in Luft auf die Bedingungen im Wasser ohne Neukalibrierung, sowie die Selbstkalibrierung für Lichtschnittverfahren untersucht. Das System wurde in verschiedenen Konfigurationen sowohl für statisches Scannen als auch für die mobile Kartierung erfolgreich eingesetzt. Die Validierung der Kalibrierung und der 3D-Rekonstruktion anhand von Referenzobjekten und der Vergleich von Freiformflächen in klarem Wasser zeigen das hohe Genauigkeitspotenzial im Bereich von einem Millimeter bis weniger als einem Zentimeter in Abhängigkeit von der Messdistanz. Die mobile Unterwasserkartierung und Bewegungskompensation anhand visuell-inertialer Odometrie wird mit einem neuen optischen Unterwasserscanner auf Basis der Streifenprojektion demonstriert. Dabei ermöglicht die kontinuierliche Registrierung von Einzelscans die Erfassung von 3D-Modellen von einem Unterwasserfahrzeug aus. Mit Hilfe von parallel aufgenommenen RGB-Bildern werden dabei farbige 3D-Punktwolken der Unterwasserszenen erstellt. Diese 3D-Karten dienen beispielsweise dem Bediener bei der Fernsteuerung von Unterwasserfahrzeugen und bilden die Grundlage für Offshore-Inspektions- und Vermessungsaufgaben. Die fortschreitende Automatisierung der Messtechnik wird somit auch eine Verwendung durch Nichtfachleute ermöglichen und gleichzeitig die Erfassungszeit erheblich verkürzen und die Genauigkeit verbessern, was die Vermessung im Wasser kostengünstiger und effizienter macht. T3 - Forschungsberichte in der Robotik = Research Notes in Robotics - 28 KW - Selbstkalibrierung KW - Punktwolke KW - Bildverarbeitung KW - 3D Reconstruction KW - Self-calibration KW - Underwater Scanning KW - Underwater Mapping KW - Dreidimensionale Rekonstruktion KW - 3D-Rekonstruktion Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-322693 SN - 978-3-945459-45-4 ER - TY - RPRT A1 - Großmann, Marcel A1 - Le, Duy Thanh T1 - Visualization of Network Emulation Enabled by Kathará T2 - KuVS Fachgespräch - Würzburg Workshop on Modeling, Analysis and Simulation of Next-Generation Communication Networks 2023 (WueWoWAS’23) N2 - In network research, reproducibility of experiments is not always easy to achieve. Infrastructures are cumbersome to set up or are not available due to vendor-specific devices. Emulators try to overcome those issues to a given extent and are available in different service models. Unfortunately, the usability of emulators requires time-consuming efforts and a deep understanding of their functionality. At first, we analyze to which extent currently available open-source emulators support network configurations and how user-friendly they are. With these insights, we describe, how an ease-to-use emulator is implemented and may run as a Network Emulator as a Service (NEaaS). Therefore, virtualization plays a major role in order to deploy a NEaaS based on Kathará. KW - Network Emulator KW - Visualized Kathará KW - Containerization Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-322189 ER - TY - RPRT A1 - Dworzak, Manuel A1 - Großmann, Marcel A1 - Le, Duy Thanh T1 - Federated Learning for Service Placement in Fog and Edge Computing T2 - KuVS Fachgespräch - Würzburg Workshop on Modeling, Analysis and Simulation of Next-Generation Communication Networks 2023 (WueWoWAS’23) N2 - Service orchestration requires enormous attention and is a struggle nowadays. Of course, virtualization provides a base level of abstraction for services to be deployable on a lot of infrastructures. With container virtualization, the trend to migrate applications to a micro-services level in order to be executable in Fog and Edge Computing environments increases manageability and maintenance efforts rapidly. Similarly, network virtualization adds effort to calibrate IP flows for Software-Defined Networks and eventually route it by means of Network Function Virtualization. Nevertheless, there are concepts like MAPE-K to support micro-service distribution in next-generation cloud and network environments. We want to explore, how a service distribution can be improved by adopting machine learning concepts for infrastructure or service changes. Therefore, we show how federated machine learning is integrated into a cloud-to-fog-continuum without burdening single nodes. KW - fog computing KW - SDN KW - orchestration KW - federated learning Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-322193 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 - Hossfeld, Tobias A1 - Heegaard, Poul E. A1 - Kellerer, Wolfgang T1 - Comparing the scalability of communication networks and systems JF - IEEE Access N2 - Scalability is often mentioned in literature, but a stringent definition is missing. In particular, there is no general scalability assessment which clearly indicates whether a system scales or not or whether a system scales better than another. The key contribution of this article is the definition of a scalability index (SI) which quantifies if a system scales in comparison to another system, a hypothetical system, e.g., linear system, or the theoretically optimal system. The suggested SI generalizes different metrics from literature, which are specialized cases of our SI. The primary target of our scalability framework is, however, benchmarking of two systems, which does not require any reference system. The SI is demonstrated and evaluated for different use cases, that are (1) the performance of an IoT load balancer depending on the system load, (2) the availability of a communication system depending on the size and structure of the network, (3) scalability comparison of different location selection mechanisms in fog computing with respect to delays and energy consumption; (4) comparison of time-sensitive networking (TSN) mechanisms in terms of efficiency and utilization. Finally, we discuss how to use and how not to use the SI and give recommendations and guidelines in practice. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work which provides a general SI for the comparison and benchmarking of systems, which is the primary target of our scalability analysis. KW - communication networks KW - performance KW - availability KW - scalability Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-349403 VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Loh, Frank A1 - Wamser, Florian A1 - Poignée, Fabian A1 - Geißler, Stefan A1 - Hoßfeld, Tobias T1 - YouTube Dataset on Mobile Streaming for Internet Traffic Modeling and Streaming Analysis JF - Scientific Data N2 - Around 4.9 billion Internet users worldwide watch billions of hours of online video every day. As a result, streaming is by far the predominant type of traffic in communication networks. According to Google statistics, three out of five video views come from mobile devices. Thus, in view of the continuous technological advances in end devices and increasing mobile use, datasets for mobile streaming are indispensable in research but only sparsely dealt with in literature so far. With this public dataset, we provide 1,081 hours of time-synchronous video measurements at network, transport, and application layer with the native YouTube streaming client on mobile devices. The dataset includes 80 network scenarios with 171 different individual bandwidth settings measured in 5,181 runs with limited bandwidth, 1,939 runs with emulated 3 G/4 G traces, and 4,022 runs with pre-defined bandwidth changes. This corresponds to 332 GB video payload. We present the most relevant quality indicators for scientific use, i.e., initial playback delay, streaming video quality, adaptive video quality changes, video rebuffering events, and streaming phases. KW - internet traffic KW - mobile streaming KW - YouTube Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-300240 VL - 9 IS - 1 ER -