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Wireless communication is nothing new. The first data transmissions based on electromagnetic waves have been successfully performed at the end of the 19th century. However, it took almost another century until the technology was ripe for mass market. The first mobile communication systems based on the transmission of digital data were introduced in the late 1980s. Within just a couple of years they have caused a revolution in the way people communicate. The number of cellular phones started to outnumber the fixed telephone lines in many countries and is still rising. New technologies in 3G systems, such as UMTS, allow higher data rates and support various kinds of multimedia services. Nevertheless, the end of the road in wireless communication is far from being reached. In the near future, the Internet and cellular phone systems are expected to be integrated to a new form of wireless system. Bandwidth requirements for a rich set of wireless services, e.g.\ video telephony, video streaming, online gaming, will be easily met. The transmission of voice data will just be another IP based service. On the other hand, building such a system is by far not an easy task. The problems in the development of the UMTS system showed the high complexity of wireless systems with support for bandwidth-hungry, IP-based services. But the technological challenges are just one difficulty. Telecommunication systems are planned on a world-wide basis, such that standard bodies, governments, institutions, hardware vendors, and service providers have to find agreements and compromises on a number of different topics. In this work, we provide the reader with a discussion of many of the topics involved in the planning of a Wireless LAN system that is capable of being integrated into the 4th generation mobile networks (4G) that is being discussed nowadays. Therefore, it has to be able to cope with interactive voice and video traffic while still offering high data rates for best effort traffic. Let us assume a scenario where a huge office complex is completely covered with Wireless LAN access points. Different antenna systems are applied in order to reduce the number of access points that are needed on the one hand, while optimizing the coverage on the other. No additional infrastructure is implemented. Our goal is to evaluate whether the Wireless LAN technology is capable of dealing with the various demands of such a scenario. First, each single access point has to be capable of supporting best-effort and Quality of Service (QoS) demanding applications simultaneously. The IT infrastructure in our scenario consists solely of Wireless LAN, such that it has to allow users surfing the Web, while others are involved in voice calls or video conferences. Then, there is the problem of overlapping cells. Users attached to one access point produce interference for others. However, the QoS support has to be maintained, which is not an easy task. Finally, there are nomadic users, which roam from one Wireless LAN cell to another even during a voice call. There are mechanisms in the standard that allow for mobility, but their capabilities for QoS support are yet to be studied. This shows the large number of unresolved issues when it comes to Wireless LAN in the context of 4G networks. In this work we want to tackle some of the problems.
Nowadays, robotics plays an important role in increasing fields of application. There exist many environments or situations where mobile robots instead of human beings are used, since the tasks are too hazardous, uncomfortable, repetitive, or costly for humans to perform. The autonomy and the mobility of the robot are often essential for a good solution of these problems. Thus, such a robot should at least be able to answer the question "Where am I?". This thesis investigates the problem of self-localizing a robot in an indoor environment using range measurements. That is, a robot equipped with a range sensor wakes up inside a building and has to determine its position using only its sensor data and a map of its environment. We examine this problem from an idealizing point of view (reducing it into a pure geometric one) and further investigate a method of Guibas, Motwani, and Raghavan from the field of computational geometry to solving it. Here, so-called visibility skeletons, which can be seen as coarsened representations of visibility polygons, play a decisive role. In the major part of this thesis we analyze the structures and the occurring complexities in the framework of this scheme. It turns out that the main source of complication are so-called overlapping embeddings of skeletons into the map polygon, for which we derive some restrictive visibility constraints. Based on these results we are able to improve one of the occurring complexity bounds in the sense that we can formulate it with respect to the number of reflex vertices instead of the total number of map vertices. This also affects the worst-case bound on the preprocessing complexity of the method. The second part of this thesis compares the previous idealizing assumptions with the properties of real-world environments and discusses the occurring problems. In order to circumvent these problems, we use the concept of distance functions, which model the resemblance between the sensor data and the map, and appropriately adapt the above method to the needs of realistic scenarios. In particular, we introduce a distance function, namely the polar coordinate metric, which seems to be well suited to the localization problem. Finally, we present the RoLoPro software where most of the discussed algorithms are implemented (including the polar coordinate metric).
Within this thesis a new philosophy in monitoring spacecrafts is presented: the
unification of the various kinds of monitoring techniques used during the
different lifecylce phases of a spacecraft.
The challenging requirements being set for this monitoring framework are:
- "separation of concerns" as a design principle (dividing the steps of logging
from registered sources, sending to connected sinks and displaying of
information),
- usage during all mission phases,
- usage by all actors (EGSE engineers, groundstation operators, etc.),
- configurable at runtime, especially regarding the level of detail of logging
information, and
- very low resource consumption.
First a prototype of the monitoring framework was developed as a support library
for the real-time operating system
RODOS. This prototype was tested on dedicated hardware platforms relevant for
space, and also on a satellite demonstrator used for educational purposes.
As a second step, the results and lessons learned from the development and usage
of this prototype were transfered to a real space mission: the first satellite
of the DLR compact satellite series - a space based platform for DLR's own
research activities. Within this project, the software of the avionic subsystem
was supplemented by a powerful logging component, which enhances the traditional
housekeeping capabilities and offers extensive filtering and debugging
techniques for monitoring and FDIR needs. This logging component is the major
part of the flight version of the monitoring framework. It is completed by
counterparts running on the development computers and as well as the EGSE
hardware in the integration room, making it most valuable already in the
earliest stages of traditional spacecraft development.
Future plans in terms of adding support from the groundstation as well will lead
to a seamless integration of the monitoring framework not only into to the
spacecraft itself, but into the whole space system.
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.
Understanding human navigation behavior has implications for a wide range of application scenarios. For example, insights into geo-spatial navigation in urban areas can impact city planning or public transport. Similarly, knowledge about navigation on the web can help to improve web site structures or service experience.
In this work, we focus on a hypothesis-driven approach to address the task of understanding human navigation: We aim to formulate and compare ideas — for example stemming from existing theory, literature, intuition, or previous experiments — based on a given set of navigational observations. For example, we may compare whether tourists exploring a city walk “short distances” before taking their next photo vs. they tend to "travel long distances between points of interest", or whether users browsing Wikipedia "navigate semantically" vs. "click randomly".
For this, the Bayesian method HypTrails has recently been proposed. However, while HypTrails is a straightforward and flexible approach, several major challenges remain:
i) HypTrails does not account for heterogeneity (e.g., incorporating differently behaving user groups such as tourists and locals is not possible), ii) HypTrails does not support the user in conceiving novel hypotheses when confronted with a large set of possibly relevant background information or influence factors, e.g., points of interest, popularity of locations, time of the day, or user properties, and finally iii) formulating hypotheses can be technically challenging depending on the application scenario (e.g., due to continuous observations or temporal constraints). In this thesis, we address these limitations by introducing various novel methods and tools and explore a wide range of case studies.
In particular, our main contributions are the methods MixedTrails and SubTrails which specifically address the first two limitations: MixedTrails is an approach for hypothesis comparison that extends the previously proposed HypTrails method to allow formulating and comparing heterogeneous hypotheses (e.g., incorporating differently behaving user groups). SubTrails is a method that supports hypothesis conception by automatically discovering interpretable subgroups with exceptional navigation behavior. In addition, our methodological contributions also include several tools consisting of a distributed implementation of HypTrails, a web application for visualizing geo-spatial human navigation in the context of background information, as well as a system for collecting, analyzing, and visualizing mobile participatory sensing data.
Furthermore, we conduct case studies in many application domains, which encompass — among others — geo-spatial navigation based on photos from the photo-sharing platform Flickr, browsing behavior on the social tagging system BibSonomy, and task choosing behavior on a commercial crowdsourcing platform. In the process, we develop approaches to cope with application specific subtleties (like continuous observations and temporal constraints). The corresponding studies illustrate the variety of domains and facets in which navigation behavior can be studied and, thus, showcase the expressiveness, applicability, and flexibility of our methods. Using these methods, we present new aspects of navigational phenomena which ultimately help to better understand the multi-faceted characteristics of human navigation behavior.
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.
In this thesis, we present novel approaches for formation driving of nonholonomic robots and optimal trajectory planning to reach a target region. The methods consider a static known map of the environment as well as unknown and dynamic obstacles detected by sensors of the formation. The algorithms are based on leader following techniques, where the formation of car-like robots is maintained in a shape determined by curvilinear coordinates. Beyond this, the general methods of formation driving are specialized and extended for an application of airport snow shoveling. Detailed descriptions of the algorithms complemented by relevant stability and convergence studies will be provided in the following chapters. Furthermore, discussions of the applicability will be verified by various simulations in existing robotic environments and also by a hardware experiment.
Deep Learning (DL) models are trained on a downstream task by feeding (potentially preprocessed) input data through a trainable Neural Network (NN) and updating its parameters to minimize the loss function between the predicted and the desired output. While this general framework has mainly remained unchanged over the years, the architectures of the trainable models have greatly evolved. Even though it is undoubtedly important to choose the right architecture, we argue that it is also beneficial to develop methods that address other components of the training process. We hypothesize that utilizing domain knowledge can be helpful to improve DL models in terms of performance and/or efficiency. Such model-agnostic methods can be applied to any existing or future architecture. Furthermore, the black box nature of DL models motivates the development of techniques to understand their inner workings. Considering the rapid advancement of DL architectures, it is again crucial to develop model-agnostic methods.
In this thesis, we explore six principles that incorporate domain knowledge to understand or improve models. They are applied either on the input or output side of the trainable model. Each principle is applied to at least two DL tasks, leading to task-specific implementations. To understand DL models, we propose to use Generated Input Data coming from a controllable generation process requiring knowledge about the data properties. This way, we can understand the model’s behavior by analyzing how it changes when one specific high-level input feature changes in the generated data. On the output side, Gradient-Based Attribution methods create a gradient at the end of the NN and then propagate it back to the input, indicating which low-level input features have a large influence on the model’s prediction. The resulting input features can be interpreted by humans using domain knowledge.
To improve the trainable model in terms of downstream performance, data and compute efficiency, or robustness to unwanted features, we explore principles that each address one of the training components besides the trainable model. Input Masking and Augmentation directly modifies the training input data, integrating knowledge about the data and its impact on the model’s output. We also explore the use of Feature Extraction using Pretrained Multimodal Models which can be seen as a beneficial preprocessing step to extract useful features. When no training data is available for the downstream task, using such features and domain knowledge expressed in other modalities can result in a Zero-Shot Learning (ZSL) setting, completely eliminating the trainable model. The Weak Label Generation principle produces new desired outputs using knowledge about the labels, giving either a good pretraining or even exclusive training dataset to solve the downstream task. Finally, improving and choosing the right Loss Function is another principle we explore in this thesis. Here, we enrich existing loss functions with knowledge about label interactions or utilize and combine multiple task-specific loss functions in a multitask setting.
We apply the principles to classification, regression, and representation tasks as well as to image and text modalities. We propose, apply, and evaluate existing and novel methods to understand and improve the model. Overall, this thesis introduces and evaluates methods that complement the development and choice of DL model architectures.
Parametric weighted finite automata (PWFA) are a multi-dimensional generalization of weighted finite automata. The expressiveness of PWFA contains the expressiveness of weighted finite automata as well as the expressiveness of affine iterated function system. The thesis discusses theory and applications of PWFA. The properties of PWFA definable sets are studied and it is shown that some fractal generator systems can be simulated using PWFA and that various real and complex functions can be represented by PWFA. Furthermore, the decoding of PWFA and the interpretation of PWFA definable sets is discussed.
An enduring engineering problem is the creation of unreliable software leading to unreliable systems. One reason for this is source code is written in a complicated manner making it too hard for humans to review and understand. Complicated code leads to other issues beyond dependability, such as expanded development efforts and ongoing difficulties with maintenance, ultimately costing developers and users more money.
There are many ideas regarding where blame lies in the reation of buggy and unreliable systems. One prevalent idea is the selected life cycle model is to blame. The oft-maligned “waterfall” life cycle model is a particularly popular recipient of blame. In response, many organizations changed their life cycle model in hopes of addressing these issues. Agile life cycle models have become very popular, and they promote communication between team members and end users. In theory, this communication leads to fewer misunderstandings and should lead to less complicated and more reliable code.
Changing the life cycle model can indeed address communications ssues, which can resolve many problems with understanding requirements.
However, most life cycle models do not specifically address coding practices or software architecture. Since lifecycle models do not address the structure of the code, they are often ineffective at addressing problems related to code complicacy.
This dissertation answers several research questions concerning software complicacy, beginning with an investigation of traditional metrics and static analysis to evaluate their usefulness as measurement tools. This dissertation also establishes a new concept in applied linguistics by creating a measurement of software complicacy based on linguistic economy. Linguistic economy describes the efficiencies of speech, and this thesis shows the applicability of linguistic economy to software. Embedded in each topic is a discussion
of the ramifications of overly complicated software, including the relationship of complicacy to software faults. Image recognition using machine learning is also investigated as a potential method of identifying problematic source code.
The central part of the work focuses on analyzing the source code of hundreds of different projects from different areas. A static analysis was performed on the source code of each project, and traditional software metrics were calculated. Programs were also analyzed using techniques developed by linguists to measure expression and statement complicacy and identifier complicacy. Professional software engineers were also directly surveyed to understand mainstream perspectives.
This work shows it is possible to use traditional metrics as indicators of potential project bugginess. This work also discovered it is possible to use image recognition to identify problematic pieces of source code. Finally, this work discovered it is possible to use linguistic methods to determine which statements and expressions are least desirable and more complicated for programmers.
This work’s principle conclusion is that there are multiple ways to discover traits indicating a project or a piece of source code has characteristics of being buggy. Traditional metrics and static analysis can be used to gain some understanding of software complicacy and bugginess potential. Linguistic economy demonstrates a new tool for measuring software complicacy, and machine learning can predict where bugs may lie in source code. The significant implication of this work is developers can recognize when a project is becoming buggy and take practical steps to avoid creating buggy projects.
The thesis looks at the question asking for the computability of the dot-depth of star-free regular languages. Here one has to determine for a given star-free regular language the minimal number of alternations between concatenation on one hand, and intersection, union, complement on the other hand. This question was first raised in 1971 (Brzozowski/Cohen) and besides the extended star-heights problem usually refered to as one of the most difficult open questions on regular languages. The dot-depth problem can be captured formally by hierarchies of classes of star-free regular languages B(0), B(1/2), B(1), B(3/2),... and L(0), L(1/2), L(1), L(3/2),.... which are defined via alternating the closure under concatenation and Boolean operations, beginning with single alphabet letters. Now the question of dot-depth is the question whether these hierarchy classes have decidable membership problems. The thesis makes progress on this question using the so-called forbidden pattern approach: Classes of regular languages are characterized in terms of patterns in finite automata (subgraphs in the transition graph) that are not allowed. Such a characterization immediately implies the decidability of the respective class, since the absence of a certain pattern in a given automaton can be effectively verified. Before this work, the decidability of B(0), B(1/2), B(1) and L(0), L(1/2), L(1), L(3/2) were known. Here a detailed study of these classes with help of forbidden patterns is given which leads to new insights into their inner structure. Furthermore, the decidability of B(3/2) is proven. Based on these results a theory of pattern iteration is developed which leads to the introduction of two new hierarchies of star-free regular languages. These hierarchies are decidable on one hand, on the other hand they are in close connection to the classes B(n) and L(n). It remains an open question here whether they may in fact coincide. Some evidence is given in favour of this conjecture which opens a new way to attack the dot-depth problem. Moreover, it is shown that the class L(5/2) is decidable in the restricted case of a two-letter alphabet.
The complexity of membership problems for finite recurrent systems and minimal triangulations
(2006)
The dissertation thesis studies the complexity of membership problems. Generally, membership problems consider the question whether a given object belongs to a set. Object and set are part of the input. The thesis studies the complexity of membership problems for two special kinds of sets. The first problem class asks whether a given natural number belongs to a set of natural numbers. The set of natural numbers is defined via finite recurrent systems: sets are built by iterative application of operations, like union, intersection, complementation and arithmetical operations, to already defined sets. This general problem implies further problems by restricting the set of used operations. The thesis contains completeness results for well-known complexity classes as well as undecidability results for these problems. The second problem class asks whether a given graph is a minimal triangulation of another graph. A graph is a triangulation of another graph, if it is a chordal spanning supergraph of the second graph. If no proper supergraph of the first graph is a triangulation of the second graph, the first graph is a minimal triangulation of the second graph. The complexity of the membership problem for minimal triangulations of several graph classes is investigated. Restricted variants are solved by linear-time algorithms. These algorithms rely on appropriate characterisations of minimal triangulations.
Latency is an inherent problem of computing systems. Each computation takes time until the result is available. Virtual reality systems use elaborated computer resources to create virtual experiences. The latency of those systems is often ignored or assumed as small enough to provide a good experience.
This cumulative thesis is comprised of published peer reviewed research papers exploring the behaviour and effects of latency. Contrary to the common description of time invariant latency, latency is shown to fluctuate. Few other researchers have looked into this time variant behaviour. This thesis explores time variant latency with a focus on randomly occurring latency spikes. Latency spikes are observed both for small algorithms and as end to end latency in complete virtual reality systems. Most latency measurements gather close to the mean latency with potentially multiple smaller clusters of larger latency values and rare extreme outliers. The latency behaviour differs for different implementations of an algorithm. Operating system schedulers and programming language environments such as garbage collectors contribute to the overall latency behaviour. The thesis demonstrates these influences on the example of different implementations of message passing.
The plethora of latency sources result in an unpredictable latency behaviour. Measuring and reporting it in scientific experiments is important. This thesis describes established approaches to measuring latency and proposes an enhanced setup to gather detailed information. The thesis proposes to dissect the measured data with a stacked z-outlier-test to separate the clusters of latency measurements for better reporting.
Latency in virtual reality applications can degrade the experience in multiple ways. The thesis focuses on cybersickness as a major detrimental effect. An approach to simulate time variant latency is proposed to make latency available as an independent variable in experiments to understand latency's effects. An experiment with modified latency shows that latency spikes can contribute to cybersickness. A review of related research shows that different time invariant latency behaviour also contributes to cybersickness.
This work deals with teams in teleoperation scenarios, where one human team partner (supervisor) guides and controls multiple remote entities (either robotic or human) and coordinates their tasks. Such a team needs an appropriate infrastructure for sharing information and commands. The robots need to have a level of autonomy, which matches the assigned task. The humans in the team have to be provided with autonomous support, e.g. for information integration. Design and capabilities of the human-robot interfaces will strongly influence the performance of the team as well as the subjective feeling of the human team partners. Here, it is important to elaborate the information demand as well as how information is presented. Such human-robot systems need to allow the supervisor to gain an understanding of what is going on in the remote environment (situation awareness) by providing the necessary information. This includes achieving fast assessment of the robot´s or remote human´s state. Processing, integration and organization of data as well as suitable autonomous functions support decision making and task allocation and help to decrease the workload in this multi-entity teleoperation task. Interaction between humans and robots is improved by a common world model and a responsive system and robots. The remote human profits from a simplified user interface providing exactly the information needed for the actual task at hand. The topic of this thesis is the investigation of such teleoperation interfaces in human-robot teams, especially for high-risk, time-critical, and dangerous tasks. The aim is to provide a suitable human-robot team structure as well as analyze the demands on the user interfaces. On one side, it will be looked on the theoretical background (model, interactions, and information demand). On the other side, real implementations for system, robots, and user interfaces are presented and evaluated as testbeds for the claimed requirements. Rescue operations, more precisely fire-fighting, was chosen as an exemplary application scenario for this work. The challenges in such scenarios are high (highly dynamic environments, high risk, time criticality etc.) and it can be expected that results can be transferred to other applications, which have less strict requirements. The present work contributes to the introduction of human-robot teams in task-oriented scenarios, such as working in high risk domains, e.g. fire-fighting. It covers the theoretical background of the required system, the analysis of related human factors concepts, as well as discussions on implementation. An emphasis is placed on user interfaces, their design, requirements and user testing, as well as on the used techniques (three-dimensional sensor data representation, mixed reality, and user interface design guidelines). Further, the potential integration of 3D sensor data as well as the visualization on stereo visualization systems is introduced.
Recent advances in Natural Language Preprocessing (NLP) allow for a fully automatic extraction of character networks for an incoming text. These networks serve as a compact and easy to grasp representation of literary fiction. They offer an aggregated view of the text, which can be used during distant reading approaches for the analysis of literary hypotheses. In their core, the networks consist of nodes, which represent literary characters, and edges, which represent relations between characters. For an automatic extraction of such a network, the first step is the detection of the references of all fictional entities that are of importance for a text. References to the fictional entities appear in the form of names, noun phrases and pronouns and prior to this work, no components capable of automatic detection of character references were available. Existing tools are only capable of detecting proper nouns, a subset of all character references. When evaluated on the task of detecting proper nouns in the domain of literary fiction, they still underperform at an F1-score of just about 50%. This thesis uses techniques from the field of semi-supervised learning, such as Distant supervision and Generalized Expectations, and improves the results of an existing tool to about 82%, when evaluated on all three categories in literary fiction, but without the need for annotated data in the target domain. However, since this quality is still not sufficient, the decision to annotate DROC, a corpus comprising 90 fragments of German novels was made. This resulted in a new general purpose annotation environment titled as ATHEN, as well as annotated data that spans about 500.000 tokens in total. Using this data, the combination of supervised algorithms and a tailored rule based algorithm, which in combination are able to exploit both - local consistencies as well as global consistencies - yield an algorithm with an F1-score of about 93%. This component is referred to as the Kallimachos tagger.
A character network can not directly display references however, instead they need to be clustered so that all references that belong to a real world or fictional entity are grouped together. This process widely known as coreference resolution is a hard problem in the focus of research for more than half a century. This work experimented with adaptations of classical feature based machine learning, with a dedicated rule based algorithm and with modern techniques of Deep Learning, but no approach can surpass 55% B-Cubed F1, when evaluated on DROC. Due to this barrier, many researchers do not use a fully-fledged coreference resolution when they extract character networks, but only focus on a more forgiving subset- the names. For novels such as Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Caroll, this would however only result in a network in which many important characters are missing. In order to integrate important characters into the network that are not named by the author, this work makes use of automatic detection of speaker and addressees for direct speech utterances (all entities involved in a dialog are considered to be of importance). This problem is by itself not an easy task, however the most successful system analysed in this thesis is able to correctly determine the speaker to about 85% of the utterances as well as about 65% of the addressees. This speaker information can not only help to identify the most dominant characters, but also serves as a way to model the relations between entities.
During the span of this work, components have been developed to model relations between characters using speaker attribution, using co-occurrences as well as by the usage of true interactions, for which yet again a dataset was annotated using ATHEN. Furthermore, since relations between characters are usually typed, a component for the extraction of a typed relation was developed. Similar to the experiments for the character reference detection, a combination of a rule based and a Maximum Entropy classifier yielded the best overall results, with the extraction of family relations showing a score of about 80% and the quality of love relations with a score of about 50%. For family relations, a kernel for a Support Vector Machine was developed that even exceeded the scores of the combined approach but is behind on the other labels.
In addition, this work presents new ways to evaluate automatically extracted networks without the need of domain experts, instead it relies on the usage of expert summaries. It also refrains from the uses of social network analysis for the evaluation, but instead presents ranked evaluations using Precision@k and the Spearman Rank correlation coefficient for the evaluation of the nodes and edges of the network. An analysis using these metrics showed, that the central characters of a novel are contained with high probability but the quality drops rather fast if more than five entities are analyzed. The quality of the edges is mainly dominated by the quality of the coreference resolution and the correlation coefficient between gold edges and system edges therefore varies between 30 and 60%.
All developed components are aggregated alongside a large set of other preprocessing modules in the Kallimachos pipeline and can be reused without any restrictions.
This thesis is devoted to the study of computational complexity theory, a branch of theoretical computer science. Computational complexity theory investigates the inherent difficulty in designing efficient algorithms for computational problems. By doing so, it analyses the scalability of computational problems and algorithms and places practical limits on what computers can actually accomplish. Computational problems are categorised into complexity classes. Among the most important complexity classes are the class NP and the subclass of NP-complete problems, which comprises many important optimisation problems in the field of operations research. Moreover, with the P-NP-problem, the class NP represents the most important unsolved question in computer science. The first part of this thesis is devoted to the study of NP-complete-, and more generally, NP-hard problems. It aims at improving our understanding of this important complexity class by systematically studying how altering NP-hard sets affects their NP-hardness. This research is related to longstanding open questions concerning the complexity of unions of disjoint NP-complete sets, and the existence of sparse NP-hard sets. The second part of the thesis is also dedicated to complexity classes but takes a different perspective: In a sense, after investigating the interior of complexity classes in the first part, the focus shifts to the description of complexity classes and thereby to the exterior in the second part. It deals with the description of complexity classes through leaf languages, a uniform framework which allows us to characterise a great variety of important complexity classes. The known concepts are complemented by a new leaf-language model. To a certain extent, this new approach combines the advantages of the known models. The presented results give evidence that the connection between the theory of formal languages and computational complexity theory might be closer than formerly known.
This thesis deals with the management and analysis of source code, which is represented in XML. Using the elementary methods of the XML repository, the XML source code representation is accessed, changed, updated, and saved. We reason about the source code, refactor source code and we visualize dependency graphs for call analysis. The visualized dependencies between files, modules, or packages are used to structure the source code in order to get a system, which is easily to comprehend, to modify and to complete. Sophisticated methods have been developed to slice the source code in order to obtain a working package of a large system, containing only a specific functionality. The basic methods, on which the visualizations and analyses are built on can be changed like changing a plug-in. The visualization methods can be reused in order to handle arbitrary source code representations, e.g., JAML, PHPML, PROLOGML. Dependencies of other context can be visualized, too, e.g., ER diagrams, or website references. The tool SCAV supports source code visualization and analyzing methods.
Since the first CubeSat launch in 2003, the hardware and software complexity of the nanosatellites was continuosly increasing.
To keep up with the continuously increasing mission complexity and to retain the primary advantages of a CubeSat mission, a new approach for the overall space and ground software architecture and protocol configuration is elaborated in this work.
The aim of this thesis is to propose a uniform software and protocol architecture as a basis for software development, test, simulation and operation of multiple pico-/nanosatellites based on ultra-low power components.
In contrast to single-CubeSat missions, current and upcoming nanosatellite formation missions require faster and more straightforward development, pre-flight testing and calibration procedures as well as simultaneous operation of multiple satellites.
A dynamic and decentral Compass mission network was established in multiple active CubeSat missions, consisting of uniformly accessible nodes.
Compass middleware was elaborated to unify the communication and functional interfaces between all involved mission-related software and hardware components.
All systems can access each other via dynamic routes to perform service-based M2M communication.
With the proposed model-based communication approach, all states, abilities and functionalities of a system are accessed in a uniform way.
The Tiny scripting language was designed to allow dynamic code execution on ultra-low power components as a basis for constraint-based in-orbit scheduler and experiment execution.
The implemented Compass Operations front-end enables far-reaching monitoring and control capabilities of all ground and space systems.
Its integrated constraint-based operations task scheduler allows the recording of complex satellite operations, which are conducted automatically during the overpasses.
The outcome of this thesis became an enabling technology for UWE-3, UWE-4 and NetSat CubeSat missions.
Object six Degrees of Freedom (6DOF) pose estimation is a fundamental problem in many practical robotic applications, where the target or an obstacle with a simple or complex shape can move fast in cluttered environments. In this thesis, a 6DOF pose estimation algorithm is developed based on the fused data from a time-of-flight camera and a color camera. The algorithm is divided into two stages, an annealed particle filter based coarse pose estimation stage and a gradient decent based accurate pose optimization stage. In the first stage, each particle is evaluated with sparse representation. In this stage, the large inter-frame motion of the target can be well handled. In the second stage, the range data based conventional Iterative Closest Point is extended by incorporating the target appearance information and used for calculating the accurate pose by refining the coarse estimate from the first stage. For dealing with significant illumination variations during the tracking, spherical harmonic illumination modeling is investigated and integrated into both stages. The robustness and accuracy of the proposed algorithm are demonstrated through experiments on various objects in both indoor and outdoor environments. Moreover, real-time performance can be achieved with graphics processing unit acceleration.
A complete simulation system is proposed that can be used as an educational tool by physicians in training basic skills of Minimally Invasive Vascular Interventions. In the first part, a surface model is developed to assemble arteries having a planar segmentation. It is based on Sweep Surfaces and can be extended to T- and Y-like bifurcations. A continuous force vector field is described, representing the interaction between the catheter and the surface. The computation time of the force field is almost unaffected when the resolution of the artery is increased.
The mechanical properties of arteries play an essential role in the study of the circulatory system dynamics, which has been becoming increasingly important in the treatment of cardiovascular diseases. In Virtual Reality Simulators, it is crucial to have a tissue model that responds in real time. In this work, the arteries are discretized by a two dimensional mesh and the nodes are connected by three kinds of linear springs. Three tissue layers (Intima, Media, Adventitia) are considered and, starting from the stretch-energy density, some of the elasticity tensor components are calculated. The physical model linearizes and homogenizes the material response, but it still contemplates the geometric nonlinearity. In general, if the arterial stretch varies by 1% or less, then the agreement between the linear and nonlinear models is trustworthy.
In the last part, the physical model of the wire proposed by Konings is improved. As a result, a simpler and more stable method is obtained to calculate the equilibrium configuration of the wire. In addition, a geometrical method is developed to perform relaxations. It is particularly useful when the wire is hindered in the physical method because of the boundary conditions. The physical and the geometrical methods are merged, resulting in efficient relaxations. Tests show that the shape of the virtual wire agrees with the experiment. The proposed algorithm allows real-time executions and the hardware to assemble the simulator has a low cost.