@article{44687,
  abstract     = {{Entwicklungsprojekte stehen in einem Spannungsfeld von Volatilität, Unsicherheit, Komplexität und Ambiguität (VUCA). Resilient Requirements Engineering (RRE) ist ein vielversprechender Ansatz, diesen Rahmenbedingungen gerecht zu werden und erfolgreich zu entwickeln. Es werden Methoden aus den drei Innovationsfeldern des RRE – Vorausschau, Effizienz und Nachhaltigkeit – angewendet, um Effizienzpotenziale in der Produktentwicklung zu nutzen und frühzeitig Nachhaltigkeitsdimensionen in der Ermittlung von Stakeholderbedürfnissen zu verankern.}},
  author       = {{Gräßler, Iris and Oleff, Christian and Preuß, Daniel and Koch, Anna-Sophie}},
  issn         = {{2511-0896}},
  journal      = {{Zeitschrift für wirtschaftlichen Fabrikbetrieb}},
  keywords     = {{Management Science and Operations Research, Strategy and Management, General Engineering}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{222--225}},
  publisher    = {{Walter de Gruyter GmbH}},
  title        = {{{Resilient Requirements Engineering}}},
  doi          = {{10.1515/zwf-2023-1030}},
  volume       = {{118}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{44044,
  abstract     = {{Dispersion is present in every optical setup and is often an undesired effect, especially in nonlinear-optical experiments where ultrashort laser pulses are needed. Typically, bulky pulse compressors consisting of gratings or prisms are used
to address this issue by precompensating the dispersion of the optical components. However, these devices are only able to compensate for a part of the dispersion (second-order dispersion). Here, we present a compact pulse-shaping device that uses plasmonic metasurfaces to apply an arbitrarily designed spectral phase delay allowing for a full dispersion control. Furthermore, with specific phase encodings, this device can be used to temporally reshape the incident laser pulses into more complex pulse forms such as a double pulse. We verify the performance of our device by using an SHG-FROG measurement setup together with a retrieval algorithm to extract the dispersion that our device applies to an incident laser pulse.}},
  author       = {{Geromel, René and Georgi, Philip and Protte, Maximilian and Lei, Shiwei and Bartley, Tim and Huang, Lingling and Zentgraf, Thomas}},
  issn         = {{1530-6984}},
  journal      = {{Nano Letters}},
  keywords     = {{Mechanical Engineering, Condensed Matter Physics, General Materials Science, General Chemistry, Bioengineering}},
  number       = {{8}},
  pages        = {{3196 -- 3201}},
  publisher    = {{American Chemical Society (ACS)}},
  title        = {{{Compact Metasurface-Based Optical Pulse-Shaping Device}}},
  doi          = {{10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c04980}},
  volume       = {{23}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{44857,
  abstract     = {{Ancestral reconstruction is a classic task in comparative genomics. Here, we study the genome median problem, a related computational problem which, given a set of three or more genomes, asks to find a new genome that minimizes the sum of pairwise distances between it and the given genomes. The distance stands for the amount of evolution observed at the genome level, for which we determine the minimum number of rearrangement operations necessary to transform one genome into the other. For almost all rearrangement operations the median problem is NP-hard, with the exception of the breakpoint median that can be constructed efficiently for multichromosomal circular and mixed genomes. In this work, we study the median problem under a restricted rearrangement measure called c4-distance, which is closely related to the breakpoint and the DCJ distance. We identify tight bounds and decomposers of the c4-median and develop algorithms for its construction, one exact ILP-based and three combinatorial heuristics. Subsequently, we perform experiments on simulated data sets. Our results suggest that the c4-distance is useful for the study the genome median problem, from theoretical and practical perspectives.}},
  author       = {{Silva, Helmuth O.M. and Rubert, Diego P. and Araujo, Eloi and Steffen, Eckhard and Doerr, Daniel and Martinez, Fábio V.}},
  issn         = {{0399-0559}},
  journal      = {{RAIRO - Operations Research}},
  keywords     = {{Management Science and Operations Research, Computer Science Applications, Theoretical Computer Science}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{1045--1058}},
  publisher    = {{EDP Sciences}},
  title        = {{{Algorithms for the genome median under a restricted measure of rearrangement}}},
  doi          = {{10.1051/ro/2023052}},
  volume       = {{57}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{44078,
  author       = {{Andreiev, Anatolii and Hoyer, Kay-Peter and Hengsbach, Florian and Haase, Michael and Tasche, Lennart and Duschik, Kristina and Schaper, Mirko}},
  issn         = {{0924-0136}},
  journal      = {{Journal of Materials Processing Technology}},
  keywords     = {{Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering, Metals and Alloys, Computer Science Applications, Modeling and Simulation, Ceramics and Composites}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier BV}},
  title        = {{{Powder bed fusion of soft-magnetic iron-based alloys with high silicon content}}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.jmatprotec.2023.117991}},
  volume       = {{317}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{45484,
  abstract     = {{<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Graffiti is an urban phenomenon that is increasingly attracting the interest of the sciences. To the best of our knowledge, no suitable data corpora are available for systematic research until now. The Information System Graffiti in Germany project (<jats:sc>Ingrid</jats:sc>) closes this gap by dealing with graffiti image collections that have been made available to the project for public use. Within <jats:sc>Ingrid</jats:sc>, the graffiti images are collected, digitized and annotated. With this work, we aim to support the rapid access to a comprehensive data source on <jats:sc>Ingrid</jats:sc> targeted especially by researchers. In particular, we present <jats:sc>Ingrid</jats:sc>KG, an RDF knowledge graph of annotated graffiti, abides by the Linked Data and FAIR principles. We weekly update <jats:sc>Ingrid</jats:sc>KG by augmenting the new annotated graffiti to our knowledge graph. Our generation pipeline applies RDF data conversion, link discovery and data fusion approaches to the original data. The current version of <jats:sc>Ingrid</jats:sc>KG contains 460,640,154 triples and is linked to 3 other knowledge graphs by over 200,000 links. In our use case studies, we demonstrate the usefulness of our knowledge graph for different applications.</jats:p>}},
  author       = {{Sherif, Mohamed Ahmed and da Silva, Ana Alexandra Morim and Pestryakova, Svetlana and Ahmed, Abdullah Fathi and Niemann, Sven and Ngomo, Axel-Cyrille Ngonga}},
  issn         = {{2052-4463}},
  journal      = {{Scientific Data}},
  keywords     = {{Library and Information Sciences, Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty, Computer Science Applications, Education, Information Systems, Statistics and Probability}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{Springer Science and Business Media LLC}},
  title        = {{{IngridKG: A FAIR Knowledge Graph of Graffiti}}},
  doi          = {{10.1038/s41597-023-02199-8}},
  volume       = {{10}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{45813,
  abstract     = {{<jats:p>A previous follow-up of the GINIplus study showed that breastfeeding could protect against early eczema. However, effects diminished in adolescence, possibly indicating a “rebound effect” in breastfed children after initial protection. We evaluated the role of early eczema until three years of age on allergies until young adulthood and assessed whether early eczema modifies the association between breastfeeding and allergies. Data from GINIplus until 20-years of age (N = 4058) were considered. Information on atopic eczema, asthma, and rhinitis was based on reported physician’s diagnoses. Adjusted Odds Ratios (aOR) were modelled by using generalized estimating equations. Early eczema was associated with eczema (aORs = 3.2–14.4), asthma (aORs = 2.2–2.7), and rhinitis (aORs = 1.2–2.7) until young adulthood. For eczema, this association decreased with age (p-for-interaction = 0.002–0.006). Longitudinal models did not show associations between breastfeeding and the respective allergies from 5 to 20 years of age. Moreover, early eczema generally did not modify the association between milk feeding and allergies except for rhinitis in participants without family history of atopy. Early eczema strongly predicts allergies until young adulthood. While preventive effects of full breastfeeding on eczema in infants with family history of atopy does not persist until young adulthood, the hypothesis of a rebound effect after initial protection cannot be confirmed.</jats:p>}},
  author       = {{Libuda, Lars and Filipiak-Pittroff, Birgit and Standl, Marie and Schikowski, Tamara and von Berg, Andrea and Koletzko, Sibylle and Bauer, Carl-Peter and Heinrich, Joachim and Berdel, Dietrich and Gappa, Monika}},
  issn         = {{2072-6643}},
  journal      = {{Nutrients}},
  keywords     = {{Food Science, Nutrition and Dietetics}},
  number       = {{12}},
  publisher    = {{MDPI AG}},
  title        = {{{Full Breastfeeding and Allergic Diseases—Long-Term Protection or Rebound Effects?}}},
  doi          = {{10.3390/nu15122780}},
  volume       = {{15}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{45828,
  abstract     = {{<jats:p>This article presents the potential-dependent adsorption of two proteins, bovine serum albumin (BSA) and lysozyme (LYZ), on Ti6Al4V alloy at pH 7.4 and 37 °C. The adsorption process was studied on an electropolished alloy under cathodic and anodic overpotentials, compared to the open circuit potential (OCP). To analyze the adsorption process, various complementary interface analytical techniques were employed, including PM-IRRAS (polarization-modulation infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy), AFM (atomic force microscopy), XPS (X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy), and E-QCM (electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance) measurements. The polarization experiments were conducted within a potential range where charging of the electric double layer dominates, and Faradaic currents can be disregarded. The findings highlight the significant influence of the interfacial charge distribution on the adsorption of BSA and LYZ onto the alloy surface. Furthermore, electrochemical analysis of the protein layers formed under applied overpotentials demonstrated improved corrosion protection properties. These studies provide valuable insights into protein adsorption on titanium alloys under physiological conditions, characterized by varying potentials of the passive alloy.</jats:p>}},
  author       = {{Duderija, Belma and González-Orive, Alejandro and Ebbert, Christoph and Neßlinger, Vanessa and Keller, Adrian and Grundmeier, Guido}},
  issn         = {{1420-3049}},
  journal      = {{Molecules}},
  keywords     = {{Chemistry (miscellaneous), Analytical Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Physical and Theoretical Chemistry, Molecular Medicine, Drug Discovery, Pharmaceutical Science}},
  number       = {{13}},
  pages        = {{5109}},
  publisher    = {{MDPI AG}},
  title        = {{{Electrode Potential-Dependent Studies of Protein Adsorption on Ti6Al4V Alloy}}},
  doi          = {{10.3390/molecules28135109}},
  volume       = {{28}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{45856,
  author       = {{Thorenz, Kristin and Berwinkel, Andre and Weigelt, Matthias}},
  issn         = {{2152-7180}},
  journal      = {{Psychology}},
  keywords     = {{General Earth and Planetary Sciences, General Environmental Science}},
  number       = {{06}},
  pages        = {{1070--1084}},
  publisher    = {{Scientific Research Publishing, Inc.}},
  title        = {{{A Validation Study of the German Versions of the Feeling Scale and the Felt Arousal Scale for a Passive Relaxation Technique (Autogenic Training)}}},
  doi          = {{10.4236/psych.2023.146058}},
  volume       = {{14}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{46018,
  author       = {{Su, Ran and Zhang, Jiahui and Wong, Vienna and Zhang, Dawei and Yang, Yong and Luo, Zheng‐Dong and Wang, Xiaojing and Wen, Hui and Liu, Yang and Seidel, Jan and Yang, Xiaolong and Pan, Ying and Li, Fa‐tang}},
  issn         = {{0935-9648}},
  journal      = {{Advanced Materials}},
  keywords     = {{Mechanical Engineering, Mechanics of Materials, General Materials Science}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley}},
  title        = {{{Engineering Sub‐Nanometer Hafnia‐Based Ferroelectric to Break The Scaling Relation for High‐Efficiency Piezocatalytic Water Splitting}}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/adma.202303018}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{46061,
  abstract     = {{<jats:p>DNA origami nanostructures have emerged as functional materials for applications in various areas of science and technology. In particular, the transfer of the DNA origami shape into inorganic materials using...</jats:p>}},
  author       = {{Pothineni, Bhanu Kiran and Grundmeier, Guido and Keller, Adrian}},
  issn         = {{2040-3364}},
  journal      = {{Nanoscale}},
  keywords     = {{General Materials Science}},
  publisher    = {{Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)}},
  title        = {{{Cation-dependent assembly of hexagonal DNA origami lattices on SiO2 surfaces}}},
  doi          = {{10.1039/d3nr02926c}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{38041,
  abstract     = {{<jats:p>While FPGA accelerator boards and their respective high-level design tools are maturing, there is still a lack of multi-FPGA applications, libraries, and not least, benchmarks and reference implementations towards sustained HPC usage of these devices. As in the early days of GPUs in HPC, for workloads that can reasonably be decoupled into loosely coupled working sets, multi-accelerator support can be achieved by using standard communication interfaces like MPI on the host side. However, for performance and productivity, some applications can profit from a tighter coupling of the accelerators. FPGAs offer unique opportunities here when extending the dataflow characteristics to their communication interfaces.</jats:p>
          <jats:p>In this work, we extend the HPCC FPGA benchmark suite by multi-FPGA support and three missing benchmarks that particularly characterize or stress inter-device communication: b_eff, PTRANS, and LINPACK. With all benchmarks implemented for current boards with Intel and Xilinx FPGAs, we established a baseline for multi-FPGA performance. Additionally, for the communication-centric benchmarks, we explored the potential of direct FPGA-to-FPGA communication with a circuit-switched inter-FPGA network that is currently only available for one of the boards. The evaluation with parallel execution on up to 26 FPGA boards makes use of one of the largest academic FPGA installations.</jats:p>}},
  author       = {{Meyer, Marius and Kenter, Tobias and Plessl, Christian}},
  issn         = {{1936-7406}},
  journal      = {{ACM Transactions on Reconfigurable Technology and Systems}},
  keywords     = {{General Computer Science}},
  publisher    = {{Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)}},
  title        = {{{Multi-FPGA Designs and Scaling of HPC Challenge Benchmarks via MPI and Circuit-Switched Inter-FPGA Networks}}},
  doi          = {{10.1145/3576200}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{46213,
  author       = {{Weber, Daniel and Schenke, Maximilian and Wallscheid, Oliver}},
  issn         = {{2169-3536}},
  journal      = {{IEEE Access}},
  keywords     = {{General Engineering, General Materials Science, General Computer Science, Electrical and Electronic Engineering}},
  pages        = {{76524--76536}},
  publisher    = {{Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)}},
  title        = {{{Steady-State Error Compensation for Reinforcement Learning-Based Control of Power Electronic Systems}}},
  doi          = {{10.1109/access.2023.3297274}},
  volume       = {{11}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{46217,
  author       = {{Renner, Britta and Buyken, Anette and Gedrich, Kurt and Lorkowski, Stefan and Watzl, Bernhard and Linseisen, Jakob and Daniel, Hannelore and Conrad, Johanna and Ferrario, Paola G. and Holzapfel, Christina and Leitzmann, Michael and Richter, Margrit and Simon, Marie-Christine and Sina, Christian and Wirsam, Jan}},
  issn         = {{2161-8313}},
  journal      = {{Advances in Nutrition}},
  keywords     = {{Nutrition and Dietetics, Medicine (miscellaneous), Food Science}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier BV}},
  title        = {{{Perspective: A Conceptual Framework for Adaptive Personalized Nutrition Advice Systems}}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.advnut.2023.06.009}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{45361,
  abstract     = {{<jats:p> The non-orthogonal local submatrix method applied to electronic structure–based molecular dynamics simulations is shown to exceed 1.1 EFLOP/s in FP16/FP32-mixed floating-point arithmetic when using 4400 NVIDIA A100 GPUs of the Perlmutter system. This is enabled by a modification of the original method that pushes the sustained fraction of the peak performance to about 80%. Example calculations are performed for SARS-CoV-2 spike proteins with up to 83 million atoms. </jats:p>}},
  author       = {{Schade, Robert and Kenter, Tobias and Elgabarty, Hossam and Lass, Michael and Kühne, Thomas and Plessl, Christian}},
  issn         = {{1094-3420}},
  journal      = {{The International Journal of High Performance Computing Applications}},
  keywords     = {{Hardware and Architecture, Theoretical Computer Science, Software}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  title        = {{{Breaking the exascale barrier for the electronic structure problem in ab-initio molecular dynamics}}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/10943420231177631}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{46278,
  abstract     = {{<jats:p>Site-controlled Ga droplets on AlGaAs substrates are fabricated using area-selective deposition of Ga through apertures in a mask during molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). The Ga droplets can be crystallized into GaAs quantum dots using a crystallization step under As flux. In order to model the complex process, including the masked deposition of the droplets and a reduction of their number during a thermal annealing step, a multiscale kinetic Monte Carlo (mkMC) simulation of self-assembled Ga droplet formation on AlGaAs is expanded for area-selective deposition. The simulation has only two free model parameters: the activation energy for surface diffusion and the activation energy for thermal escape of adatoms from a droplet. Simulated droplet numbers within the opening of the aperture agree quantitatively with the experimental results down to the perfect site-control, with one droplet per aperture. However, the model parameters are different compared to those of the self-assembled droplet growth. We attribute this to the presence of the mask in close proximity to the surface, which modifies the local process temperature and the As background. This approach also explains the dependence of the model parameters on the size of the aperture.</jats:p>}},
  author       = {{Feddersen, Stefan and Zolatanosha, Viktoryia and Alshaikh, Ahmed and Reuter, Dirk and Heyn, Christian}},
  issn         = {{2079-4991}},
  journal      = {{Nanomaterials}},
  keywords     = {{General Materials Science, General Chemical Engineering}},
  number       = {{3}},
  publisher    = {{MDPI AG}},
  title        = {{{Modeling of Masked Droplet Deposition for Site-Controlled Ga Droplets}}},
  doi          = {{10.3390/nano13030466}},
  volume       = {{13}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{46507,
  author       = {{Pramanik, Sudipta and Milaege, Dennis and Hein, Maxwell and Andreiev, Anatolii and Schaper, Mirko and Hoyer, Kay-Peter}},
  issn         = {{1438-1656}},
  journal      = {{Advanced Engineering Materials}},
  keywords     = {{Condensed Matter Physics, General Materials Science}},
  number       = {{14}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley}},
  title        = {{{An Experimental and Computational Modeling Study on Additively Manufactured Micro‐Architectured Ti–24Nb–4Zr–8Sn Hollow‐Strut Lattice Structures}}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/adem.202201850}},
  volume       = {{25}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{46517,
  author       = {{Ahmed, Abdullah Fathi and Sherif, Mohamed Ahmed and Ngomo, Axel-Cyrille Ngonga}},
  issn         = {{2169-3536}},
  journal      = {{IEEE Access}},
  keywords     = {{General Engineering, General Materials Science, General Computer Science, Electrical and Electronic Engineering}},
  pages        = {{1--1}},
  publisher    = {{Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)}},
  title        = {{{NELLIE: Never-Ending Linking for Linked Open Data}}},
  doi          = {{10.1109/access.2023.3300694}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{46542,
  abstract     = {{<jats:p>Multiprotein adsorption from complex body fluids represents a highly important and complicated phenomenon in medicine. In this work, multiprotein adsorption from diluted human serum at gold and oxidized iron surfaces is investigated at different serum concentrations and pH values. Adsorption-induced changes in surface topography and the total amount of adsorbed proteins are quantified by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and polarization-modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS), respectively. For both surfaces, stronger protein adsorption is observed at pH 6 compared to pH 7 and pH 8. PM-IRRAS furthermore provides some qualitative insights into the pH-dependent alterations in the composition of the adsorbed multiprotein films. Changes in the amide II/amide I band area ratio and in particular side-chain IR absorption suggest that the increased adsorption at pH 6 is accompanied by a change in protein film composition. Presumably, this is mostly driven by the adsorption of human serum albumin, which at pH 6 adsorbs more readily and thereby replaces other proteins with lower surface affinities in the resulting multiprotein film.</jats:p>}},
  author       = {{Huang, Jingyuan and Qiu, Yunshu and Lücke, Felix and Su, Jiangling and Grundmeier, Guido and Keller, Adrian}},
  issn         = {{1420-3049}},
  journal      = {{Molecules}},
  keywords     = {{Chemistry (miscellaneous), Analytical Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Physical and Theoretical Chemistry, Molecular Medicine, Drug Discovery, Pharmaceutical Science}},
  number       = {{16}},
  publisher    = {{MDPI AG}},
  title        = {{{Multiprotein Adsorption from Human Serum at Gold and Oxidized Iron Surfaces Studied by Atomic Force Microscopy and Polarization-Modulation Infrared Reflection Absorption Spectroscopy}}},
  doi          = {{10.3390/molecules28166060}},
  volume       = {{28}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@article{46543,
  abstract     = {{<jats:p>The influence of nanoscale surface topography on protein adsorption is highly important for numerous applications in medicine and technology. Herein, ferritin adsorption at flat and nanofaceted, single-crystalline Al2O3 surfaces is investigated using atomic force microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The nanofaceted surfaces are generated by the thermal annealing of Al2O3 wafers at temperatures above 1000 °C, which leads to the formation of faceted saw-tooth-like surface topographies with periodicities of about 160 nm and amplitudes of about 15 nm. Ferritin adsorption at these nanofaceted surfaces is notably suppressed compared to the flat surface at a concentration of 10 mg/mL, which is attributed to lower adsorption affinities of the newly formed facets. Consequently, adsorption is restricted mostly to the pattern grooves, where the proteins can maximize their contact area with the surface. However, this effect depends on the protein concentration, with an inverse trend being observed at 30 mg/mL. Furthermore, different ferritin adsorption behavior is observed at topographically similar nanofacet patterns fabricated at different annealing temperatures and attributed to different step and kink densities. These results demonstrate that while protein adsorption at solid surfaces can be notably affected by nanofacet patterns, fine-tuning protein adsorption in this way requires the precise control of facet properties.</jats:p>}},
  author       = {{Pothineni, Bhanu K. and Kollmann, Sabrina and Li, Xinyang and Grundmeier, Guido and Erb, Denise J. and Keller, Adrian}},
  issn         = {{1422-0067}},
  journal      = {{International Journal of Molecular Sciences}},
  keywords     = {{Inorganic Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Physical and Theoretical Chemistry, Computer Science Applications, Spectroscopy, Molecular Biology, General Medicine, Catalysis}},
  number       = {{16}},
  publisher    = {{MDPI AG}},
  title        = {{{Adsorption of Ferritin at Nanofaceted Al2O3 Surfaces}}},
  doi          = {{10.3390/ijms241612808}},
  volume       = {{24}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

@techreport{46521,
  author       = {{Freise, Diana and Schiele, Valentin and Schmitz, Hendrik}},
  issn         = {{1556-5068}},
  keywords     = {{General Earth and Planetary Sciences, General Environmental Science}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier BV}},
  title        = {{{Housing Situations and Local COVID-19 Infection Dynamics – A Case Study With Small-Area Data}}},
  doi          = {{10.2139/ssrn.4372490}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

