TY - GEN
AB - What is the power of polynomial-time quantum computation with access to an NP
oracle? In this work, we focus on two fundamental tasks from the study of
Boolean satisfiability (SAT) problems: search-to-decision reductions, and
approximate counting. We first show that, in strong contrast to the classical
setting where a poly-time Turing machine requires $\Theta(n)$ queries to an NP
oracle to compute a witness to a given SAT formula, quantumly $\Theta(\log n)$
queries suffice. We then show this is tight in the black-box model - any
quantum algorithm with "NP-like" query access to a formula requires
$\Omega(\log n)$ queries to extract a solution with constant probability.
Moving to approximate counting of SAT solutions, by exploiting a quantum link
between search-to-decision reductions and approximate counting, we show that
existing classical approximate counting algorithms are likely optimal. First,
we give a lower bound in the "NP-like" black-box query setting: Approximate
counting requires $\Omega(\log n)$ queries, even on a quantum computer. We then
give a "white-box" lower bound (i.e. where the input formula is not hidden in
the oracle) - if there exists a randomized poly-time classical or quantum
algorithm for approximate counting making $o(log n)$ NP queries, then
$\text{BPP}^{\text{NP}[o(n)]}$ contains a $\text{P}^{\text{NP}}$-complete
problem if the algorithm is classical and $\text{FBQP}^{\text{NP}[o(n)]}$
contains an $\text{FP}^{\text{NP}}$-complete problem if the algorithm is
quantum.
AU - Gharibian, Sevag
AU - Kamminga, Jonas
ID - 50406
T2 - arXiv:2401.03943
TI - BQP, meet NP: Search-to-decision reductions and approximate counting
ER -
TY - CONF
AU - Tews, Karina
AU - Teutenberg, Dominik
AU - Meschut, Gerson
AU - Buczek, Moritz
AU - Duffe, Tobias
AU - Kullmer, Gunter
ID - 52212
T2 - 24. Kolloquium: Gemeinsame Forschung in der Klebtechnik
TI - Bruchmechanisches Schnittebenenkonzept zur lebensdauergerechten Auslegung von hyperelastischen Klebverbindungen bei multiaxialen und variablen Belastungsamplituden
ER -
TY - CONF
AU - Scholtysik, Michel
AU - Rohde, Malte
AU - Koldewey, Christian
AU - Dumitrescu, Roman
ID - 49364
TI - Business strategy taxonomy and solution patterns for the circular economy
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - Charge transfer mechanism in the deprotonation-induced n-type doping of PCBM.
AU - Dong, Chuan-Ding
AU - Bauch, Fabian
AU - Hu, Yuanyuan
AU - Schumacher, Stefan
ID - 51221
IS - 5
JF - Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
KW - Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
KW - General Physics and Astronomy
SN - 1463-9076
TI - Charge transfer in superbase n-type doping of PCBM induced by deprotonation
VL - 26
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Labusch, Amelie
AU - Eickelmann, Birgit
AU - Casamassima, Gianna
AU - Drossel, Kerstin
AU - Gudmundsdottir, G.B.
AU - Kazani, A.
AU - Mifsud, L.
AU - Symeonaki, M.
AU - Teidla-Kunitsõn, G.
ED - Holmarsdottir, H.B.
ED - Seland, I.
ED - Hyggen, C.
ED - Roth, M.
ID - 51098
T2 - Understanding the everyday digital lives of children and young people
TI - Children and young people’s ICT experiences in school education: Participatory research design to engage children and young people as experts in research
ER -
TY - GEN
AU - Staffel, Florian Lukas
ID - 51624
IS - 2
T2 - Sehepunkte
TI - Christian Marx: Wegbereiter der Globalisierung. Multinationale Unternehmen der westeuropäischen Chemieindustrie in der Zeit nach dem Boom (1960er-2000er Jahre) (= Nach dem Boom), Göttingen 2023.
VL - 24
ER -
TY - CONF
AU - Scholtysik, Michel
AU - Rohde, Malte
AU - Koldewey, Christian
AU - Dumitrescu, Roman
ID - 49363
TI - Circular Product-Service-System Ideation Canvas – A Framework for the Design of circular Product-Service-System Ideas
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Intveen, Julie
ID - 52332
JF - MEIN FACH - Englisch Sek II
TI - Commonwealth Connections. Discovering global dynamics through Model UN discourse
VL - 1
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - Broadband coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (BCARS) is a powerful spectroscopy method combining high signal intensity with spectral sensitivity, enabling rapid imaging of heterogeneous samples in biomedical research and, more recently, in crystalline materials. However, BCARS encounters spectral distortion due to a setup-dependent non-resonant background (NRB). This study assesses BCARS reproducibility through a round robin experiment using two distinct BCARS setups and crystalline materials with varying structural complexity, including diamond, 6H-SiC, KDP, and KTP. The analysis compares setup-specific NRB correction procedures, detected and NRB-removed spectra, and mode assignment. We determine the influence of BCARS setup parameters like pump wavelength, pulse width, and detection geometry and provide a practical guide for optimizing BCARS setups for solid-state applications.
AU - Hempel, Franz
AU - Vernuccio, Federico
AU - König, Lukas
AU - Buschbeck, Robin
AU - Rüsing, Michael
AU - Cerullo, Giulio
AU - Polli, Dario
AU - Eng, Lukas M.
ID - 49652
IS - 1
JF - Applied Optics
KW - Atomic and Molecular Physics
KW - and Optics
KW - Engineering (miscellaneous)
KW - Electrical and Electronic Engineering
SN - 1559-128X
TI - Comparing transmission- and epi-BCARS: a round robin on solid-state materials
VL - 63
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Treder, Alexandra
ED - Cuéllar Valcárcel, María de Lourdes
ED - Gerena Meléndez, Alicia Alexesteva
ED - Gil Carillo, Ittay Osiris
ID - 48943
T2 - Memorias del III Congreso Internacional de Lenguas, Lingüística y Traducción
TI - Concepciones de cultura y de encuentros interculturales de futuros/as profesores/as de Alemán como Lengua Extranjera
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - ELDIRK methods are defined to have an Explicit Last stage in the general Butcher array of Diagonal Implicit Runge-Kutta methods, with the consequence, that no additional system of equations must be solved, compared to the embedded RK method. Two general formulations for second- and third-order ELDIRK methods have been obtained recently in Mahnken [21] with specific schemes, e.g. for the embedded implicit Euler method, the embedded trapezoidal-rule and the embedded Ellsiepen method. In the first part of this paper, we investigate some general stability characteristics of ELDIRK methods, and it will be shown that the above specific RK schemes are not A-stable. Therefore, in the second part, the above-mentioned general formulations are used for further stability investigations, with the aim to construct new second- and third-order ELDIRK methods which simultaneously are A-stable. Two numerical examples are concerned with the curing for a thermosetting material and phase-field RVE modeling for crystallinity and orientation. The numerical results confirm the theoretical results on convergence order and stability.
AU - Mahnken, Rolf
AU - Westermann, Hendrik
ID - 52233
JF - Computational Mechanics
KW - Applied Mathematics
KW - Computational Mathematics
KW - Computational Theory and Mathematics
KW - Mechanical Engineering
KW - Ocean Engineering
KW - Computational Mechanics
SN - 0178-7675
TI - Construction of A-stable explicit last-stage diagonal implicit Runge–Kutta (ELDIRK) methods
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Uhe, Benedikt
AU - Kuball, Clara-Maria
AU - Merklein, Marion
AU - Meschut, Gerson
ID - 51116
JF - Production Engineering
TI - Corrosion behaviour of self-piercing riveted joints with uncoated rivets in high nitrogen steel
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - Abstract
Background
An infection with SARS-CoV-2 can lead to a variety of symptoms and complications, which can impair athletic activity.
Objective
We aimed to assess the clinical symptom patterns, diagnostic findings, and the extent of impairment in sport practice in a large cohort of athletes infected with SARS-CoV-2, both initially after infection and at follow-up. Additionally, we investigated whether baseline factors that may contribute to reduced exercise tolerance at follow-up can be identified.
Methods
In this prospective, observational, multicenter study, we recruited German COVID elite-athletes (cEAs, n = 444) and COVID non-elite athletes (cNEAs, n = 481) who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 by PCR (polymerase chain reaction test). Athletes from the federal squad with no evidence of SARS-CoV-2 infection served as healthy controls (EAcon, n = 501). Questionnaires were used to assess load and duration of infectious symptoms, other complaints, exercise tolerance, and duration of training interruption at baseline and at follow-up 6 months after baseline. Diagnostic tests conducted at baseline included resting and exercise electrocardiogram (ECG), echocardiography, spirometry, and blood analyses.
Results
Most acute and infection-related symptoms and other complaints were more prevalent in cNEA than in cEAs. Compared to cEAs, EAcon had a low symptom load. In cNEAs, female athletes had a higher prevalence of complaints such as palpitations, dizziness, chest pain, myalgia, sleeping disturbances, mood swings, and concentration problems compared to male athletes (p < 0.05). Until follow-up, leading symptoms were drop in performance, concentration problems, and dyspnea on exertion. Female athletes had significantly higher prevalence for symptoms until follow-up compared to male. Pathological findings in ECG, echocardiography, and spirometry, attributed to SARS-CoV-2 infection, were rare in infected athletes. Most athletes reported a training interruption between 2 and 4 weeks (cNEAs: 52.9%, cEAs: 52.4%), while more cNEAs (27.1%) compared to cEAs (5.1%) had a training interruption lasting more than 4 weeks (p < 0.001). At follow-up, 13.8% of cNEAs and 9.9% of cEAs (p = 0.24) reported their current exercise tolerance to be under 70% compared to pre-infection state. A persistent loss of exercise tolerance at follow-up was associated with persistent complaints at baseline, female sex, a longer break in training, and age > 38 years. Periodical dichotomization of the data set showed a higher prevalence of infectious symptoms such as cough, sore throat, and coryza in the second phase of the pandemic, while a number of neuropsychiatric symptoms as well as dyspnea on exertion were less frequent in this period.
Conclusions
Compared to recreational athletes, elite athletes seem to be at lower risk of being or remaining symptomatic after SARS-CoV-2 infection. It remains to be determined whether persistent complaints after SARS-CoV-2 infection without evidence of accompanying organ damage may have a negative impact on further health and career in athletes. Identifying risk factors for an extended recovery period such as female sex and ongoing neuropsychological symptoms could help to identify athletes, who may require a more cautious approach to rebuilding their training regimen.
Trial Registration Number
DRKS00023717; 06.15.2021—retrospectively registered.
AU - Widmann, Manuel
AU - Gaidai, Roman
AU - Schubert, Isabel
AU - Grummt, Maximilian
AU - Bensen, Lieselotte
AU - Kerling, Arno
AU - Quermann, Anne
AU - Zacher, Jonas
AU - Vollrath, Shirin
AU - Bizjak, Daniel Alexander
AU - Beckendorf, Claudia
AU - Egger, Florian
AU - Hasler, Erik
AU - Mellwig, Klaus-Peter
AU - Fütterer, Cornelia
AU - Wimbauer, Fritz
AU - Vogel, Azin
AU - Schoenfeld, Julia
AU - Wüstenfeld, Jan C.
AU - Kastner, Tom
AU - Barsch, Friedrich
AU - Friedmann-Bette, Birgit
AU - Bloch, Wilhelm
AU - Meyer, Tim
AU - Mayer, Frank
AU - Wolfarth, Bernd
AU - Roecker, Kai
AU - Reinsberger, Claus
AU - Haller, Bernhard
AU - Niess, Andreas M.
AU - Birnbaum, Mike Peter
AU - Burgstahler, Christof
AU - Cassel, Michael
AU - Deibert, Peter
AU - Esefeld, Katrin
AU - Erz, Gunnar
AU - Greiss, Franziska
AU - Halle, Martin
AU - Hesse, Judith
AU - Keller, Karsten
AU - Kopp, Christine
AU - Matits, Lynn
AU - Predel, Hans Georg
AU - Rüdrich, Peter
AU - Schneider, Gerald
AU - Stapmanns, Philipp
AU - Steinacker, Jürgen Michael
AU - Szekessy, Sarah
AU - Venhorst, Andreas
AU - Zapf, Stephanie
AU - Zickwolf, Christian
ID - 50798
JF - Sports Medicine
KW - Physical Therapy
KW - Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation
KW - Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
SN - 0112-1642
TI - COVID-19 in Female and Male Athletes: Symptoms, Clinical Findings, Outcome, and Prolonged Exercise Intolerance—A Prospective, Observational, Multicenter Cohort Study (CoSmo-S)
ER -
TY - GEN
AU - Ustimova, Magdalina
AU - Sadeghi-Kohan, Somayeh
AU - Hellebrand, Sybille
ID - 51799
TI - Crosstalk-Aware Simulation of Interconnects Using Artificial Neural Networks
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Eke, Norbert Otto
ED - Egidi, Margreth
ED - Peters , Ludmila
ED - Schmidt, Jochen
ID - 50983
T2 - (Un)verfügbar – Kulturen des Heiligen
TI - Das Heilige – Versuch einer Definition
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Herdramm, Henrike
ID - 52652
JF - BloKK. Der Blog des Zentrums für Komparative Theologie und Kulturwissenschaften
KW - Ideologiekritik
KW - Tiertheologie
KW - Tierethik
TI - Das Potenzial von Ideologiekritik im Religionsunterricht
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Vasylyeva, Tetyana
AU - Ehmke, Timo
AU - Gövert, Andre
AU - Kassem, Amani
AU - Niederhaus, Constanze
ID - 52506
T2 - Mehrsprachigkeit in der Schule – Sprachbildung im und durch Sachunterricht
TI - DaZ-Kompetenzen angehender Lehrkräfte des Faches Sachunterricht sowie der aus dem Sachunterricht hervorgehenden Fächer
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Riese, Julia
AU - Fasel, Henrik
AU - Pannok, Maik
AU - Lier, Stefan
ID - 52388
JF - Sustainable Production and Consumption
KW - Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
KW - Renewable Energy
KW - Sustainability and the Environment
KW - Environmental Chemistry
KW - Environmental Engineering
SN - 2352-5509
TI - Decentralized production concepts for bio-based polymers - implications for supply chains, costs, and the carbon footprint
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Arends, Christian
AU - Wolf, Lasse Lennart
AU - Meinecke, Jasmin
AU - Barkhofen, Sonja
AU - Weich, Tobias
AU - Bartley, Tim
ID - 52876
IS - 1
JF - Physical Review Research
KW - General Physics and Astronomy
SN - 2643-1564
TI - Decomposing large unitaries into multimode devices of arbitrary size
VL - 6
ER -
TY - GEN
AU - Dechert, Christopher
AU - Kenig, Eugeny
ID - 52573
TI - Der Einfluss von Mikrostrukturen auf die Flüssigkeitsausbreitung in strukturierten Packungen
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Dahmen, Stephan
ED - Schär, Clarissa
ED - Heite, Catrin
ED - Magyar-Haas, Veronika
ID - 50142
T2 - Responsibilisierung
TI - Der Imperativ der Biographisierung und die Ambivalenzen individueller Verantwortungszuschreibung
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - Miller's rule is an empirical relation between the nonlinear and linear optical coefficients that applies to a large class of materials but has only been rigorously derived for the classical Lorentz model with a weak anharmonic perturbation. In this work, we extend the proof and present a detailed derivation of Miller's rule for an equivalent quantum-mechanical anharmonic oscillator. For this purpose, the classical concept of velocity-dependent damping inherent to the Lorentz model is replaced by an adiabatic switch-on of the external electric field, which allows a unified treatment of the classical and quantum-mechanical systems using identical potentials and fields. Although the dynamics of the resulting charge oscillations, and hence the induced polarizations, deviate due to the finite zero-point motion in the quantum-mechanical framework, we find that Miller's rule is nevertheless identical in both cases up to terms of first order in the anharmonicity. With a view to practical applications, especially in the context of ab initio calculations for the optical response where adiabatically switched-on fields are widely assumed, we demonstrate that a correct treatment of finite broadening parameters is essential to avoid spurious errors that may falsely suggest a violation of Miller's rule, and we illustrate this point by means of a numerical example.
AU - Meyer, Maximilian Tim
AU - Schindlmayr, Arno
ID - 52723
JF - Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
SN - 0953-4075
TI - Derivation of Miller's rule for the nonlinear optical susceptibility of a quantum anharmonic oscillator
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Niemann, Jan
AU - Raneck-Kuhlmann, A.
AU - Eickelmann, Birgit
AU - Drossel, Kerstin
AU - Buhl, Heike M.
ED - Herzig, B.
ED - Eickelmann, Birgit
ED - Schwabl, F.
ED - Schulze, J.
ED - Niemann, Jan
ID - 51127
T2 - Lehrkräftebildung in der digitalen Welt – zukunftsorientierte Forschungs- und Praxisperspektiven
TI - Determinanten und Typen phasenübergreifenden Transfers in Communities of Practice der Lehrkräftebildung
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - In applications of piezoelectric actuators and sensors, the dependability and particularly the reliability throughout their lifetime are vital to manufacturers and end-users and are enabled through condition-monitoring approaches. Existing approaches often utilize impedance measurements over a range of frequencies or velocity measurements and require additional equipment or sensors, such as a laser Doppler vibrometer. Furthermore, the non-negligible effects of varying operating conditions are often unconsidered. To minimize the need for additional sensors while maintaining the dependability of piezoelectric bending actuators irrespective of varying operating conditions, an online diagnostics approach is proposed. To this end, time- and frequency-domain features are extracted from monitored current signals to reflect hairline crack development in bending actuators. For validation of applicability, the presented analysis method was evaluated on piezoelectric bending actuators subjected to accelerated lifetime tests at varying voltage amplitudes and under external damping conditions. In the presence of a crack and due to a diminished stiffness, the resonance frequency decreases and the root-mean-square amplitude of the current signal simultaneously abruptly drops during the lifetime tests. Furthermore, the piezoelectric crack surfaces clapping is reflected in higher harmonics of the current signal. Thus, time-domain features and harmonics of the current signals are sufficient to diagnose hairline cracks in the actuators.
AU - Aimiyekagbon, Osarenren Kennedy
AU - Bender, Amelie
AU - Hemsel, Tobias
AU - Sextro, Walter
ID - 51518
IS - 3
JF - Electronics
KW - piezoelectric transducer
KW - self-sensing
KW - fault detection
KW - diagnostics
KW - hairline crack
KW - condition monitoring
SN - 2079-9292
TI - Diagnostics of Piezoelectric Bending Actuators Subjected to Varying Operating Conditions
VL - 13
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Ficara, Elena
ED - Rutledge, Jonathan
ID - 46201
SN - 9781032321097
T2 - Paradox and Contradiction in Theology
TI - Dialectical Jesus
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Ficara, Elena
ED - Schäfer, Gregor
ID - 46202
T2 - Hegel's Logic and Politics
TI - Dialectics Between Logic and Politics
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Göddertz, Nina
ID - 48081
JF - Zeitschrift für Pädagogikunterricht
TI - Didaktik der Sozialpädagogik – Entwicklungslinien, Diskurse und Herausforderungen.
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Schön, Lena
AU - Graßl, Benjamin
AU - Giese, Henning
ID - 49868
JF - Steuer und Wirtschaft
TI - Die Kriterien und Zusammensetzung der EU-Blacklist als Grundlage des Steueroasen-Abwehrgesetzes – Eine kritische Würdigung
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Peckhaus, Volker
ED - Remenyi, Maria
ED - Remmert, Volker
ED - Schappacher , Norbert
ID - 44861
T2 - Geschichte der Tagungen am MFO, 1944 bis 1960er Jahre
TI - Die Neuformierung der Mathematischen Logik im Nachkriegsdeutschland
ER -
TY - CHAP
AB - Sind „soziale Medien“ überhaupt ein Thema für die Geschichtswissenschaft? Ja, denn die längere Geschichte der Digitalisierung, in der die „sozialen Medien“ einzuordnen sind, zählt bereits über 80 Jahre. Konrad Zuse und andere Ingenieure entwickelten seit 1941 die ersten Digitalcomputer, Unternehmer*innen, Wissenschaftler*innen und Staatenlenker*innen setzten diese seit den 1950er Jahren für ihre Zwecke ein, die Zivilgesellschaft adaptierte sie in den darauffolgenden Dekaden – all das prägte die sozio-digitale Landschaft der späteren „sozialen Medien“. Als unmittelbar „nach dem Boom“ etwa um 1970 zahlreiche Industriegesellschaften einen strukturellen Wandel in Wirtschaft, Gesellschaft und Politik durchlebten, war eine Antwort darauf die vermehrte Digitalisierung und Vernetzung. Daraus entwickelte sich die 1990er Jahre als markante Dekade von World Wide Web, Google und Chatdiensten. Die Entwicklung der „sozialen Medien“ ist also unter anderem in eine ökonomische und gesellschaftliche Entwicklung der Aufmerksamkeitsökonomie und in die längeren Veränderungen von Wirtschafts- und Gesellschaftsordnungen der Ausdifferenzierung und partiellen Individualisierung seit den 1960er Jahren einzuordnen. Dadurch lässt sich besser verstehen, welche Prämissen ihnen zugrunde lagen, welche Möglichkeitsräume und Probleme sich daraus ergaben und warum sie die heutige Öffentlichkeit in einer bestimmten Art und Weise dominieren – ohne sie jedoch zu determinieren.
AU - Schmitt, Martin
ID - 52511
KW - Digitalgeschichte
KW - Soziale Medien
KW - Technikgeschichte
KW - World Wide Web
KW - Digitalisierung
T2 - Soziale Medien – wie sie wurden, was sie sind
TI - Die Vorgeschichte der „sozialen Medien“. Über die Träume digitaler Vergemeinschaftung und freier Kommunikation
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Ried, Dennis
ID - 51686
IS - 1
JF - Die Tonkunst
TI - Die Werkdatensätze von Henze-Digital als Ansätze für ein digitales Werkverzeichnis
VL - 18
ER -
TY - CONF
AU - Hu, Lijie
AU - Habernal, Ivan
AU - Shen, Lei
AU - Wang, Di
ED - Graham, Yvette
ED - Purver, Matthew
ID - 52827
T2 - Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EACL 2024, St. Julian’s, Malta, March 17-22, 2024
TI - Differentially Private Natural Language Models: Recent Advances and Future Directions
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Herbert, Franziska
AU - Becker, Steffen
AU - Buckmann, Annalina
AU - Kowalewski, Marvin
AU - Hielscher, Jonas
AU - Acar, Yasemin
AU - Dürmuth, Markus
AU - Sasse, M. Angela
AU - Zou, Yixin
ID - 47275
JF - IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy. IEEE, New York, NY, USA
TI - Digital Security -- A Question of Perspective. A Large-Scale Telephone Survey with Four At-Risk User Groups
ER -
TY - BOOK
AB - Das Herausgeberwerk präsentiert aktuelle Forschungsergebnisse und praktische Erkenntnisse aus dem Bereich von digitalen Plattformen und Ökosystemen im Business-to-Business-Kontext. Dabei liegt der Schwerpunkt auf empirischen und konzeptionellen Beiträgen. Neben Grundlagen, Enablern und Fallstudien werden ebenso mögliche Vorgehensweisen zur Entwicklung von Plattformen behandelt.
Praktikerinnen und Praktiker aus den Bereichen Management, Strategische Planung und Business Development erhalten Impulse, um Digitale Plattformen und Ökosysteme erfolgreich voranzutreiben und so Potenziale innerhalb ihres Unternehmens zu realisieren.
Forschende, Lehrende und Studierende aus den Bereichen Digitale Plattformen und Ökosysteme aus dem Business-to-Business-Kontext dienen die Beiträge als Anregung für intensive Diskussionen.
ED - Schallmo, Daniel R. A.
ED - Kundisch, Dennis
ED - Lang, Klaus
ED - Hasler, Daniel
ID - 48640
TI - Digitale Plattformen und Ökosysteme im B2B-Bereich - Fallstudien, Ansätze, Technologien und Tools
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - athematische Kompetenzen digital zu fördern und digitale Kompetenzen mathematisch zu fördern – dies ist eine Forderung der neuen Bildungsstandards mit Blick auf eine Bildung in der digitalen Welt. Gerade das Potenzial digitaler Medien für das fachliche Lernen wurde in vielen Studien bestätigt. Eine sinnvoll gestaltete Einbettung digitaler Medien bietet die Chance, allen fünf Prinzipien eines guten Unterrichts gerecht zu werden: Verstehensorientierung, Durchgängigkeit, kognitive Aktivierung, Lernendenorientierung & Adaptivität und Kommunikationsförderung. Die flächendeckende Nutzung digitaler Medien etabliert sich bislang nur zögerlich. Aber wie können wir Lehrkräfte stärken, digitale Medien sinnvoll einzusetzen? Wir möchten hier die Bandbreite der Möglichkeiten an Beispielen verdeutlichen, ihren Einsatz motivieren und Wege für einen guten Unterricht aufzeigen.
AU - Barzel, Bärbel
AU - Greefrath, Gilbert
AU - Nagel, Mareike
AU - Hoffmann, Max
ID - 51841
JF - mathematik lehren
TI - Digitalisierung als Chance für alle Prinzipien guten Unterrichts
VL - 242
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Domke, Marius
AU - Fröhlich, Nadine
AU - Eickelmann, Birgit
AU - Pink, Sara
ED - Herzig, B.
ED - Eickelmann, Birgit
ED - Schwabl, F.
ED - Schulze, J.
ED - Niemann, Jan
ID - 51128
T2 - Lehrkräftebildung in der digitalen Welt – zukunftsorientierte Forschungs- und Praxisperspektiven
TI - Digitalisierungsbezogene Lehrkräftebildung als Gegenstand internationaler Schulleistungsstudien
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - We present a convolutional framework which significantly reduces the complexity and thus, the computational effort for distributed reinforcement learning control of dynamical systems governed by partial differential equations (PDEs). Exploiting translational equivariances, the high-dimensional distributed control problem can be transformed into a multi-agent control problem with many identical, uncoupled agents. Furthermore, using the fact that information is transported with finite velocity in many cases, the dimension of the agents’ environment can be drastically reduced using a convolution operation over the state space of the PDE, by which we effectively tackle the curse of dimensionality otherwise present in deep reinforcement learning. In this setting, the complexity can be flexibly adjusted via the kernel width or by using a stride greater than one (meaning that we do not place an actuator at each sensor location). Moreover, scaling from smaller to larger domains – or the transfer between different domains – becomes a straightforward task requiring little effort. We demonstrate the performance of the proposed framework using several PDE examples with increasing complexity, where stabilization is achieved by training a low-dimensional deep deterministic policy gradient agent using minimal computing resources.
AU - Peitz, Sebastian
AU - Stenner, Jan
AU - Chidananda, Vikas
AU - Wallscheid, Oliver
AU - Brunton, Steven L.
AU - Taira, Kunihiko
ID - 40171
JF - Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena
TI - Distributed Control of Partial Differential Equations Using Convolutional Reinforcement Learning
VL - 461
ER -
TY - CONF
AU - Afroze, Lameya
AU - Merkelbach, Silke
AU - von Enzberg, Sebastian
AU - Dumitrescu, Roman
ID - 49354
T2 - ML4CPS 2023
TI - Domain Knowledge Injection Guidance for Predictive Maintenance
ER -
TY - CONF
AB - Neural machine translation (NMT) is a widely popular text generation task, yet there is a considerable research gap in the development of privacy-preserving NMT models, despite significant data privacy concerns for NMT systems. Differentially private stochastic gradient descent (DP-SGD) is a popular method for training machine learning models with concrete privacy guarantees; however, the implementation specifics of training a model with DP-SGD are not always clarified in existing models, with differing software libraries used and code bases not always being public, leading to reproducibility issues. To tackle this, we introduce DP-NMT, an open-source framework for carrying out research on privacy-preserving NMT with DP-SGD, bringing together numerous models, datasets, and evaluation metrics in one systematic software package. Our goal is to provide a platform for researchers to advance the development of privacy-preserving NMT systems, keeping the specific details of the DP-SGD algorithm transparent and intuitive to implement. We run a set of experiments on datasets from both general and privacy-related domains to demonstrate our framework in use. We make our framework publicly available and welcome feedback from the community.
AU - Igamberdiev, Timour
AU - Vu, Doan Nam Long
AU - Kuennecke, Felix
AU - Yu, Zhuo
AU - Holmer, Jannik
AU - Habernal, Ivan
ED - Aletras, Nikolaos
ED - De Clercq, Orphee
ID - 52842
T2 - Proceedings of the 18th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: System Demonstrations
TI - DP-NMT: Scalable Differentially Private Machine Translation
ER -
TY - CHAP
AU - Wells, Aaron
ED - Amijee, Fatema
ID - 51011
T2 - The Bloomsbury Companion to Du Châtelet
TI - Du Châtelet’s Philosophy of Mathematics
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - I examine Du Châtelet’s methodology for physics and metaphysics through the lens of her engagement with Newton’s Rules for Reasoning in Natural Philosophy. I first show that her early manuscript writings discuss and endorse these Rules. Then, I argue that her famous published account of hypotheses continues to invoke close analogues of Rules 3 and 4, despite various developments in her position. Once relevant experimental evidence and some basic constraints are met, it is legitimate to inductively generalize from observations; general hypotheses can thereafter be assumed as true until contrary experiments show otherwise. I conclude by arguing that this account of induction plays an essential role in her metaphysics, both in an argument for simple substances—which has an inductive premise—and in her attempt to distinguish acceptable and unacceptable metaphysical commitments.
AU - Wells, Aaron
ID - 51008
JF - European Journal of Philosophy
TI - Du Châtelet, Induction, and Newton’s Rules for Reasoning
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Weber, Mike
AU - Lutters, Nicole
AU - Kenig, Eugeny Y.
ID - 52226
JF - Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research
KW - Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
KW - General Chemical Engineering
KW - General Chemistry
SN - 0888-5885
TI - Dynamics of an Absorption/Desorption Plant: Experimental Study and Model Validation
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Bauch, Fabian
AU - Dong, Chuan-Ding
AU - Schumacher, Stefan
ID - 52534
IS - 8
JF - The Journal of Physical Chemistry C
KW - Surfaces
KW - Coatings and Films
KW - Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
KW - General Energy
KW - Electronic
KW - Optical and Magnetic Materials
SN - 1932-7447
TI - Dynamics of Electron–Hole Coulomb Attractive Energy and Dipole Moment of Hot Excitons in Donor–Acceptor Polymers
VL - 128
ER -
TY - GEN
AU - Foerster, Anne
ED - Butler, Emily
ED - Dumitrescu, Irina
ID - 48362
T2 - Women in Early Medieval England
TI - Eadburh of Wessex
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - For 0 ≤ t ≤ r let m(t, r) be the maximum number s such that every t-edge-connected r-graph has s pairwise disjoint perfect matchings. There are only a few values of m(t, r) known, for instance m(3, 3) = m(4, r) = 1, and m(t, r) ≤ r − 2 for all t = 5,
and m(t, r) ≤ r − 3 if r is even. We prove that m(2l, r) ≤ 3l − 6 for every l ≥ 3 and r ≥ 2l.
AU - Ma, Yulai
AU - Mattiolo, Davide
AU - Steffen, Eckhard
AU - Wolf, Isaak Hieronymus
ID - 49905
JF - Combinatorica
KW - Computational Mathematics
KW - Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics
SN - 0209-9683
TI - Edge-Connectivity and Pairwise Disjoint Perfect Matchings in Regular Graphs
VL - 44
ER -
TY - DATA
AU - Stadler, Peter
AU - Neubert, Anna Maria
AU - Schreiter, Soveig
AU - Obert, Salome
AU - Ried, Dennis
ID - 52513
TI - Edirom/WeGA-ODD: v4.9.0
ER -
TY - JOUR
AU - Ade, Larissa
AU - Breiwe, René
AU - Dehmel, Lukas
AU - Wolf, Karsten D.
AU - Rummler, Klaus
AU - Dander, Valentin
AU - Grünberger, Nina
AU - Schiefner-Rohs, Mandy
ID - 52200
JF - Zeitschrift MedienPädagogik
TI - Editorial: ENT | GRENZ | UNGEN (in) der Medienpädagogik
VL - 53
ER -
TY - JOUR
AB - DNA origami nanostructures are a powerful tool in biomedicine and can be used to combat drug‐resistant bacterial infections. However, the effect of unmodified DNA origami nanostructures on bacteria is yet to be elucidated. With the aim to obtain a better understanding of this phenomenon, the effect of three DNA origami shapes, i.e., DNA origami triangles, six‐helix bundles (6HBs), and 24‐helix bundles (24HBs), on the growth of Gram‐negative Escherichia coli and Gram‐positive Bacillus subtilis is investigated. These results reveal that while triangles and 24HBs can be used as a source of nutrients by E. coli and thereby promote population growth, their effect is much smaller than that of genomic single‐ and double‐stranded DNA. However, no effect on E. coli population growth is observed for the 6HBs. On the other hand, B. subtilis does not show any significant changes in population growth when cultured with the different DNA origami shapes or genomic DNA. The detailed effect of DNA origami nanostructures on bacterial growth thus depends on the competence signals and uptake mechanism of each bacterial species, as well as the DNA origami shape. This should be considered in the development of antimicrobial DNA origami nanostructures.
AU - Garcia-Diosa, Jaime Andres
AU - Grundmeier, Guido
AU - Keller, Adrian
ID - 51121
JF - ChemBioChem
KW - Organic Chemistry
KW - Molecular Biology
KW - Molecular Medicine
KW - Biochemistry
SN - 1439-4227
TI - Effect of DNA Origami Nanostructures on Bacterial Growth
ER -
TY - GEN
AU - Knickenberg, Margarita
AU - Zurbriggen, Carmen
ID - 50974
TI - Effects of peer interactions and the social environment on students’ current academic motivation in the classroom: An experience sampling study.
ER -
TY - GEN
AU - Banh, Ngoc Chi
AU - Scharlau, Ingrid
ID - 53069
TI - Effects of task difficulty on visual processing speed
ER -