@article{53072, abstract = {{Negated statements require more processing efforts than assertions. However, in certain contexts, repeating negations undergo adaptation, which over time mitigates the effort. Here, we ask negations hamper visual processing and whether consecutive repetitions mitigate its influence. We assessed the overall attentional capacity and its distribution, the relative weight, quantitatively using the formal Theory of Visual Attention (TVA). Here, we employed a very simple form for negations, binary negations. Negated instructions, expressing the only alternative to the core supposition, were cognitively demanding, resulting in a loss of attentional capacity in three experiments. The overall attentional capacity recovered gradually but stagnated at a lower level than with assertions, even after many repetitions. Additionally, negations distributed the attention equally between target and reference stimulus. Repetitions slightly increased the reference' share of attention. Assertions, on the other hand, shifted the attentional weight towards the target. Few repetitions slightly decreased the bias towards the target, many repetitions increased the bias.}}, author = {{Banh, Ngoc Chi and Tünnermann, Jan and Rohlfing, Katharina J. and Scharlau, Ingrid}}, journal = {{Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics}}, title = {{{Benefiting from Binary Negations? Verbal Negations Decrease Visual Attention and Balance Its Distribution}}}, year = {{2024}}, } @inproceedings{53069, author = {{Banh, Ngoc Chi and Scharlau, Ingrid}}, location = {{Regensburg}}, title = {{{Effects of task difficulty on visual processing speed}}}, year = {{2024}}, } @inproceedings{53095, author = {{Razavi, Kamran and Ghafouri, Saeid and Mühlhäuser, Max and Jamshidi, Pooyan and Wang, Lin}}, booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 4th Workshop on Machine Learning and Systems (EuroMLSys), colocated with EuroSys 2024}}, location = {{Athens, Greece}}, publisher = {{ACM}}, title = {{{Sponge: Inference Serving with Dynamic SLOs Using In-Place Vertical Scaling}}}, year = {{2024}}, } @article{53101, abstract = {{In this work, we consider optimal control problems for mechanical systems with fixed initial and free final state and a quadratic Lagrange term. Specifically, the dynamics is described by a second order ODE containing an affine control term. Classically, Pontryagin's maximum principle gives necessary optimality conditions for the optimal control problem. For smooth problems, alternatively, a variational approach based on an augmented objective can be followed. Here, we propose a new Lagrangian approach leading to equivalent necessary optimality conditions in the form of Euler-Lagrange equations. Thus, the differential geometric structure (similar to classical Lagrangian dynamics) can be exploited in the framework of optimal control problems. In particular, the formulation enables the symplectic discretisation of the optimal control problem via variational integrators in a straightforward way.}}, author = {{Leyendecker, Sigrid and Maslovskaya, Sofya and Ober-Blöbaum, Sina and Almagro, Rodrigo T. Sato Martín de and Szemenyei, Flóra Orsolya}}, issn = {{2158-2491}}, journal = {{Journal of Computational Dynamics}}, keywords = {{Optimal control problem, Lagrangian system, Hamiltonian system, Variations, Pontryagin's maximum principle.}}, pages = {{0--0}}, publisher = {{American Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS)}}, title = {{{A new Lagrangian approach to control affine systems with a quadratic Lagrange term}}}, doi = {{10.3934/jcd.2024017}}, year = {{2024}}, } @inproceedings{34083, abstract = {{In the context of language learning, feedback comment generation is the task of generating hints or explanatory notes for learner texts that help understand why a part of text is erroneous. This paper presents our approach to the Feedback Comment Generation Shared Task, collocated with the 16th International Natural Language Generation Conference (INLG 2023). The approach augments the generation of feedback comments by a self-supervised identification of feedback types in a multitask-learning setting. Within the shared task, other approaches performed more effective, yet the combined modeling of feedback type classification and feedback comment generation is superior to performing feedback generation only.}}, author = {{Stahl, Maja and Wachsmuth, Henning}}, booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 16th International Natural Language Generation Conference}}, title = {{{Identifying Feedback Types to Augment Feedback Comment Generation}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @book{34544, abstract = {{Tax evasion, tax avoidance and tax resistance are widespread phenomena in political, economic, social and fiscal history from antiquity through medieval, early modern and modern times. Histories of Tax Evasion, Avoidance and Resistance shows how different groups and individuals around the globe have succeeded or failed in not paying their due taxes, whether in kind or in cash, on their properties or on their crops. It analyses how, throughout history, wealthy and poor taxpayers have tried to avoid or reduce their tax burden by negotiating with tax authorities, through practices of legal or illegal tax evasion, by filing lawsuits, seeking armed resistance or by migration, and how state authorities have dealt with such acts of claim making, defiance, open resistance or elusion. It fills an important research gap in tax history, addressing questions of tax morale and fairness, and how social and political inequality was negotiated through taxation. It gives rich insights into the development of citizen-state relationships throughout the course of history. The book comprises case studies from Ancient Athens, Roman Egypt, Medieval Europe, Early Modern Mexico, the Ottoman Empire, Nigeria under British colonial rule, the United Kingdom of the early 20th century, Greece during the Second World War, as well as West Germany, Switzerland, Sweden and the United States in the 20th century, including transnational entanglements in the world of late-modern offshore finance and taxation. The authors are experts in fiscal, economic, financial, legal, social and/or cultural history. The book is intended for students, researchers and scholars of economic and financial history, social and world history and political economy. The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 license.}}, author = {{Schönhärl, Korinna and Hürlimann, Gisela and Rohde, Dorothea}}, isbn = {{9781003333197}}, keywords = {{Tax History, Financial History}}, publisher = {{Routledge}}, title = {{{Histories of Tax Evasion, Avoidance and Resistance}}}, doi = {{10.4324/9781003333197}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inbook{34546, abstract = {{Jean Bodin's list on how the absolutist monarchical state could raise its revenue ranked taxation only in seventh place. From a modern legal perspective, taxes are compulsory transfers of resources that households and enterprises pay to one or several government bodies without receiving an individual, specific benefit in return. Historians have dealt with not paying taxes in various contexts, such as analysing tax resistance and tax resistance movements in history. Tax law is best understood as an outcome of long-term, often conflictual, negotiations and as an expression of specific political mentalities and ideologies. As a consequence, tax law and sometimes even the tax juridical system have a strongly politicised character. Loopholes in tax legislation that enable or facilitate avoidance or evasion can thus be regarded as a result of the interest-driven politics of parliamentary majorities, as the success of concerted lobby pressure.}}, author = {{Schönhärl, Korinna and Hürlimann, Gisela and Rohde, Dorothea}}, booktitle = {{Histories of Tax Evasion, Avoidance and Resistance }}, editor = {{Schönhärl, Korinna and Hürlimann, Gisela and Rohde, Dorothea}}, pages = {{1--15}}, publisher = {{Routledge}}, title = {{{ The Ability and Intention of Not Paying Taxes in History. Some Introductory Observations}}}, doi = {{10.4324/9781003333197}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inbook{34547, abstract = {{As a case study, this chapter examines two tax education films that were produced 11 years apart in the USA and Western Germany during and after World War II: “The New Spirit” and “Putzke wants to know”. In contrast to America's most popular cartoon character 11 years earlier, Erwin Putzke is in a terrible mood at the beginning of the short film “Putzke wants to know”. The family father and electrician with a workshop of his own is annoyed and upset by the duty of filling in his tax return, grumbling at his wife and daughter and even at their budgie. The film's tax morale message is conveyed to its audience against the backdrop of a sober post-war reality characterised by allied occupation and the Allies' say in West German tax policies during a period of laborious economic build-up after a lost war.}}, author = {{Schönhärl, Korinna}}, booktitle = {{Histories of Tax Evasion, Avoidance and Resistance}}, editor = {{Schönhärl, Korinna and Hürlimann, Gisela and Rohde, Dorothea}}, pages = {{154--167}}, publisher = {{Routledge}}, title = {{{ How to Create a Taxpaying Spirit. A Transnational Examination of an US American and a Western German Tax Education Film in and after World War II}}}, doi = {{10.4324/9781003333197}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{34880, author = {{Franke, Mario and Klingler, Florian and Sommer, Christoph}}, booktitle = {{IEEE Consumer Communications and Networking Conference (CCNC 2023), Track Communication and Applications for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles on Land, Water, and Sky}}, publisher = {{IEEE}}, title = {{{Addressing the Unbounded Latency of Best-Effort Device-to-Device Communication with Low Earth Orbit Satellite Support}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{34879, author = {{Hegde, Anupama and Delooz, Quentin and Mariyaklla, Chethan Lokesh and Festag, Andreas and Klingler, Florian}}, booktitle = {{IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC 2023), Track Emerging Technologies, Standards, and Applications}}, publisher = {{IEEE}}, title = {{{Radio Resource Allocation for Collective Perception in 5G-NR Vehicle-to-X Communication Systems}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{34878, author = {{Hardes, Tobias and Klingler, Florian and Sommer, Christoph}}, booktitle = {{IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC 2023), Track Emerging Technologies, Standards, and Applications}}, publisher = {{IEEE}}, title = {{{Improving Platooning Safety with Full Duplex Relaying and Beamforming}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inbook{34973, author = {{Süßmann, Johannes}}, booktitle = {{Bücher in Westfalen – Westfalen und ihre Bücher. Festschrift für Hermann-Josef Schmalor zum 70. Geburtstag}}, editor = {{Drobner, Hubertus R. and Stork, Hans-Walter}}, title = {{{Bibliotheken des Hellwegraums als Orte frühneuzeitlichen Kulturtransfers. Aufriß und Forschungsprogramm}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inproceedings{35083, author = {{Dann, Andreas Peter and Hermann, Ben and Bodden, Eric}}, title = {{{UpCy: Safely Updating Outdated Dependencies}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @misc{33938, author = {{Famula, Marta}}, booktitle = {{Jahrbuch Forum Vormärz Forschung 2022. [in Vorbereitung]}}, publisher = {{Aisthesis}}, title = {{{Antonia Villinger: Dramen der Schwangerschaft. Friedrich Hebbels „Judith“, „Maria Magdalena“ und „Genoveva“. Baden-Baden: Ergon 2021}}}, year = {{2023}}, } @inbook{35319, author = {{Menzefricke, Jörn Steffen and Gabriel, Stefan and Gundlach, Thomas and Hobscheidt, Daniela and Kürpick, Christian and Schnasse, Felix and Scholtysik, Michel and Seif, Heiko and Koldewey, Christian and Dumitrescu, Roman}}, booktitle = {{ Digitalisierung. Fallstudien, Tools und Erkenntnisse für das digitale Zeitalter}}, editor = {{Schallmo, Daniel}}, isbn = {{9783658366339}}, issn = {{2569-2348}}, pages = {{375--408}}, publisher = {{Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden}}, title = {{{Soziotechnisches Risikomanagement als Erfolgsfaktor für die Digitale Transformation}}}, doi = {{10.1007/978-3-658-36634-6_14}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{21199, abstract = {{As in almost every other branch of science, the major advances in data science and machine learning have also resulted in significant improvements regarding the modeling and simulation of nonlinear dynamical systems. It is nowadays possible to make accurate medium to long-term predictions of highly complex systems such as the weather, the dynamics within a nuclear fusion reactor, of disease models or the stock market in a very efficient manner. In many cases, predictive methods are advertised to ultimately be useful for control, as the control of high-dimensional nonlinear systems is an engineering grand challenge with huge potential in areas such as clean and efficient energy production, or the development of advanced medical devices. However, the question of how to use a predictive model for control is often left unanswered due to the associated challenges, namely a significantly higher system complexity, the requirement of much larger data sets and an increased and often problem-specific modeling effort. To solve these issues, we present a universal framework (which we call QuaSiModO: Quantization-Simulation-Modeling-Optimization) to transform arbitrary predictive models into control systems and use them for feedback control. The advantages of our approach are a linear increase in data requirements with respect to the control dimension, performance guarantees that rely exclusively on the accuracy of the predictive model, and only little prior knowledge requirements in control theory to solve complex control problems. In particular the latter point is of key importance to enable a large number of researchers and practitioners to exploit the ever increasing capabilities of predictive models for control in a straight-forward and systematic fashion.}}, author = {{Peitz, Sebastian and Bieker, Katharina}}, journal = {{Automatica}}, publisher = {{Elsevier}}, title = {{{On the Universal Transformation of Data-Driven Models to Control Systems}}}, doi = {{10.1016/j.automatica.2022.110840}}, volume = {{149}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{35428, abstract = {{This paper presents a model of an energy system for a private household extended by a lifetime prognosis. The energy system was designed for fully covering the year-round energy demand of a private household on the basis of electricity generated by a photovoltaic (PV) system, using a hybrid energy storage system consisting of a hydrogen unit and a lithium-ion battery. Hydrogen is produced with a Proton Exchange Membrane (PEM) electrolyser by PV surplus during the summer months and then stored in a hydrogen tank. Mainly during winter, in terms of lack of PV energy, the hydrogen is converted back into electricity and heat by a fuel cell. The model was created in Matlab/Simulink and is based on real input data. Heat demand was also taken into account and is covered by a heat pump. The simulation period is a full year to account for the seasonality of energy production and demand. Due to high initial costs, the longevity of such an energy system is of vital interest. Therefore, this model was extended by a lifetime prediction in order to optimize the dimensioning with the aim of lifetime extension of a hydrogen-based energy system. Lifetime influencing factors were identified on the basis of a literature review and were integrated in the model. An extensive parameter study was performed to evaluate different dimensionings regarding the energy balance and the lifetime of the three components, electrolyser, fuel cell and lithium-ion battery. The results demonstrate the benefits of a holistic modelling approach and enable a design optimization regarding the use of resources, lifetime and self-sufficiency of the system}}, author = {{Möller, Marius Claus and Krauter, Stefan}}, issn = {{2673-9941}}, journal = {{Solar}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{25--48}}, publisher = {{MDPI AG}}, title = {{{Dimensioning and Lifetime Prediction Model for a Hybrid, Hydrogen-Based Household PV Energy System Using Matlab/Simulink}}}, doi = {{10.3390/solar3010003}}, volume = {{3}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{35533, author = {{Büchel, Daniel and Torvik, Per Øyvind and Lehmann, Tim and Sandbakk, Øyvind and Baumeister, Jochen}}, issn = {{1530-0315}}, journal = {{Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise}}, keywords = {{Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation, Orthopedics and Sports Medicine}}, publisher = {{Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)}}, title = {{{The Mode of Endurance Exercise Influences Changes in EEG Resting State Graphs among High-Level Cross-Country Skiers}}}, doi = {{10.1249/mss.0000000000003122}}, volume = {{Publish Ahead of Print}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{35637, abstract = {{Individual cognitive functioning declines over time. We seek to understand how adverse physical health shocks in older ages contribute to this development. By use of event-study methods and data from the USA, England, and several countries in Continental Europe, we find evidence that health shocks lead to an immediate and persistent decline in cognitive functioning. This robust finding holds in all regions representing different health insurance systems and seems to be independent of underlying individual demographic characteristics such as sex and age. We also ask whether variables that are susceptible to policy action can reduce the negative consequences of a health shock. Our results suggest that neither compulsory education nor retirement regulations moderate the effects, thus emphasizing the importance for cognitive functioning of maintaining good physical health in old age.}}, author = {{Schiele, Valentin and Schmitz, Hendrik}}, journal = {{European Economic Review}}, title = {{{Understanding cognitive decline in older ages: The role of health shocks}}}, doi = {{10.1016/j.euroecorev.2022.104320}}, volume = {{151}}, year = {{2023}}, } @article{35657, abstract = {{The controlled delivery of active pharmaceutical ingredients to the site of disease represents a major challenge in drug therapy. Particularly when drugs have to be transported across biological barriers, suitable drug delivery systems are of importance. In recent years responsive delivery systems have been developed which enable a controlled drug release depending on internal or external stimuli such as changes in pH, redox environment or light and temperature. In some studies delivery systems with reactivity against two different stimuli were established either to enhance the response by synergies of the stimuli or to broaden the window of possible trigger events. In the present review numerous exciting developments of pH-, light- and redox-cleavable polymers suitable for the preparation of smart delivery systems are described. The review discusses the different stimuli that can be used for a controlled drug release of polymer-based delivery systems. It puts a focus on the different polymers described for the preparation of stimuli-sensitive systems, their preparation techniques as well as their stimuli-responsive degradation. © 2022 The Authors. Polymer International published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Industrial Chemistry.}}, author = {{Rust, Tarik and Jung, Dimitri and Langer, Klaus and Kuckling, Dirk}}, issn = {{0959-8103}}, journal = {{Polymer International}}, keywords = {{drug delivery system, stimuli, polymer, cleavable}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{5--19}}, publisher = {{Wiley}}, title = {{{Stimuli‐accelerated polymeric drug delivery systems}}}, doi = {{10.1002/pi.6474}}, volume = {{72}}, year = {{2023}}, }