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In a recently developed study programme at Reutlingen University, which focuses on practical orientations, an innovative product with solid company references is to be defined and realised by student teams. On the basis of this product, all subjects of the business engineering study programme “Sustainable Production and Business” are taught. By focusing on three main paths of future skills that have been developed by NextSkills to analyse upcoming social changes, global challenges and fields of work that are innovation-driven and agile, the new study programme aims to create responsible leaders who will shape global businesses respectfully. Thereby, different TRIZ tools help to support students in developing their own products with a focus on sustainability and pay off on the future skills enhancement. Further, students get to know TRIZ tools in an unbiased way, unburdened by too much theory, and are thus continuously supported in the progressing product development process that accompanies their studies. Hence, students perceive TRIZ on the one hand as a method to develop sustainable products and, on the other hand, to find sustainable solutions for everyday problems. The knowledge and positive experiences gained in this way should then arouse curiosity for the TRIZ class at the end of the study programme. The students can graduate with a TRIZ Level 1 certificate. Thereby, as many students as possible are introduced to the TRIZ methods, and the TRIZ tool is spread widely.
Modern component-based architectural styles, e.g., microservices, enable developing the components independently from each other. However, this independence can result in problems when it comes to managing issues, such as bugs, as developer teams can freely choose their technology stacks, such as issue management systems (IMSs), e.g., Jira, GitHub, or Redmine. In the case of a microservice architecture, if an issue of a downstream microservice depends on an issue of an upstream microservice, this must be both identified and communicated, and the downstream service’s issues should link to its causing issue. However, agile project management today requires efficient communication, which is why more and more teams are communicating through comments in the issues themselves. Unfortunately, IMSs are not integrated with each other, thus, semantically linking these issues is not supported, and identifying such issue dependencies from different IMSs is time-consuming and requires manual searching in multiple IMS technologies. This results in many context switches and prevents developers from being focused and getting things done. Therefore, in this paper, we present a concept for seamlessly integrating different IMS technologies into each other and providing a better architectural context. The concept is based on augmenting the websites of issue management systems through a browser extension. We validate the approach with a prototypical implementation for the Chrome browser. For evaluation, we conducted expert interviews, which approved that the presented approach provides significant advantages for managing issues of agile microservice architectures.
Application systems often need to be deployed in different variants if requirements that influence their implementation, hosting, and configuration differ between customers. Therefore, deployment technologies, such as Ansible or Terraform, support a certain degree of variability modeling. Besides, modern application systems typically consist of various software components deployed using multiple deployment technologies that only support their proprietary, non-interoperable variability modeling concepts. The Variable Deployment Metamodel (VDMM) manages the deployment variability across heterogeneous deployment technologies based on a single variable deployment model. However, VDMM currently only supports modeling conditional components and their relations which is sometimes too coarse-grained since it requires modeling entire components, including their implementation and deployment configuration for each different component variant. Therefore, we extend VDMM by a more fine-grained approach for managing the variability of component implementations and their deployment configurations, e.g., if a cheap version of a SaaS deployment provides only a community edition of the software and not the enterprise edition, which has additional analytical reporting functionalities built-in. We show that our extended VDMM can be used to realize variable deployments across different individual deployment technologies using a case study and our prototype OpenTOSCA Vintner.
In the era of digital transformation, the notion of software quality transcends its traditional boundaries, necessitating an expansion to encompass the realms of value creation for customers and the business. Merely optimizing technical aspects of software quality can result in diminishing returns. Product discovery techniques can be seen as a powerful mechanism for crafting products that align with an expanded concept of quality - one that incorporates value creation. Previous research has shown that companies struggle to determine appropriate product discovery techniques for generating, validating, and prioritizing ideas for new products or features to ensure they meet the needs and desires of the customers and the business. For this reason, we conducted a grey literature review to identify various techniques for product discovery. First, the article provides an overview of different techniques and assesses how frequently they are mentioned in the literature review. Second, we mapped these techniques to an existing product discovery process from previous research to provide concrete guidelines for establishing product discovery in their organizations. The analysis shows, among other things, the increasing importance of techniques to structure the problem exploration process and the product strategy process. The results are interpreted regarding the importance of the techniques to practical applications and recognizable trends.
Transforming our food system is important to achieving global climate neutrality and food security. Germany has set a national target of reaching a 30% share in organic farming to support the goal. When looking at the transformation process from conventional to organic farming, it becomes apparent that measures need to be taken to reach this anticipated goal. A particular emphasis of this work is placed on finding a digital solution and process improvements to ensure longevity and efficiency. Interviews with actors along the farm-to-fork value chain were conducted to identify central barriers and drivers of organic transformation. The results of the interviews show firstly, that three subsystems need to be distinguished when talking about the farm-to-fork value chain: (1) farmers, (2) intermediaries, and (3) the canteen system. Although all three subsystems can be combined to form a coherent value chain, they rarely act and communicate beyond the boundaries of their subsystem. Secondly, we were able to allocate primary barriers and drivers to each of the subsystems, highlighting the need to include all three in the transformation process and aim for a comprehensive digital solution. This work explores the potential of a network-based platform to improve the current practice of rigid and strictly hierarchical value chains. We focus on deriving user requirements from the interviews to describe the necessary functionality of the platform to address the identified barriers and exploit existing drivers.
Applications often need to be deployed in different variants due to different customer requirements. However, since modern applications often need to be deployed using multiple deployment technologies in combination, such as Ansible and Terraform, the deployment variability must be considered in a holistic way. To tackle this, we previously developed Variability4TOSCA and the prototype OpenTOSCA Vintner, which is a TOSCA preprocessing and management layer that implements Variability4TOSCA. In this demonstration, we present a detailed case study that shows how to model a deployment using Variability4TOSCA, how to resolve the variability using Vintner, and how the result can be deployed.
Gamification has been increasingly applied to software engineering education in the past. The approaches vary from applying game elements on a conceptual phase in the course to using specific tools to engage the students more and support their learning goals. However, existing tools usually have game elements, such as quizzes or challenges, but do not provide a more computer game-like experience. Therefore, we try to raise the level of gamified learning experience to another level by proposing Gamify-IT. Gamify-IT is a Unity- and web-based game platform intended to help students learn software engineering. It follows an immersive role-play game characteristic where the students explore a world, find and solve minigames and clear dungeons with SE tasks. Lecturers can configure the worlds, e.g., to add content hints. Furthermore, they can add and configure minigames and dungeons to include exercises in a fully gamified way. Thereby, they customize their course in Gamify-IT to adapt the world very precisely to other materials such as lectures or exercises. Results of an evaluation of our initial prototype show that (i) students like to engage with the platform, (ii) students are motivated to learn when using Gamify-IT, and (iii) the minigames support students in understanding the learning objectives.
Intelligent Tutoring Systems (ITSs) are increasingly used in modern education to automatically give students individual feedback on their performance. The advantage for students is fast individual feedback on their answers to asked questions, while lecturers benefit from considerable time savings and easy delivery of educational material. Of course, it is important that the provided feedback is as effective as direct feedback from the lecturer. However, in digital teaching, lecturers cannot assess the student’s knowledge precisely but can only provide information on which questions were answered correctly and incorrectly. Therefore, this paper presents a concept for integrating ITS elements into the gamified e-learning platform IT-REX so that the feedback quality can be improved to support students in the best possible way.
Advancing mental health diagnostics: AI-based method for depression detection in patient interviews
(2023)
In this paper, we present a novel artificial intelligence (AI) application for depression detection, using advanced transformer networks to analyse clinical interviews. By incorporating simulated data to enhance traditional datasets, we overcome limitations in data protection and privacy, consequently improving the model’s performance. Our methodology employs BERT-based models, GPT-3.5, and ChatGPT-4, demonstrating state-of-the-art results in detecting depression from linguistic patterns and contextual information that significantly outperform previous approaches. Utilising the DAIC-WOZ and Extended-DAIC datasets, our study showcases the potential of the proposed application in revolutionising mental health care through early depression detection and intervention. Empirical results from various experiments highlight the efficacy of our approach and its suitability for real-world implementation. Furthermore, we acknowledge the ethical, legal, and social implications of AI in mental health diagnostics. Ultimately, our study underscores the transformative potential of AI in mental health diagnostics, paving the way for innovative solutions that can facilitate early intervention and improve patient outcomes.
This research evaluates current measurement scales for ambidexterity and proposes a new approach for the measurement of this important construct. We argue that current measurement approaches may be unsuitable to capture the concept of ambidexterity. Through a systematic scale development process, we derive a measurement scale with dual items that simultaneously refer to both dimensions, exploitation and exploration, thus reflecting the true nature of ambidexterity. An extensive pre-test with 39 executives suggests that our scale is suitable for capturing ambidexterity. Our measurement model enhances conceptual clarity of ambidexterity and can serve as a base for future investigations of the concept.
Human pose estimation (HPE) is integral to scene understanding in numerous safety-critical domains involving human-machine interaction, such as autonomous driving or semi-automated work environments. Avoiding costly mistakes is synonymous with anticipating failure in model predictions, which necessitates meta-judgments on the accuracy of the applied models. Here, we propose a straightforward human pose regression framework to examine the behavior of two established methods for simultaneous aleatoric and epistemic uncertainty estimation: maximum a-posteriori (MAP) estimation with Monte-Carlo variational inference and deep evidential regression (DER). First, we evaluate both approaches on the quality of their predicted variances and whether these truly capture the expected model error. The initial assessment indicates that both methods exhibit the overconfidence issue common in deep probabilistic models. This observation motivates our implementation of an additional recalibration step to extract reliable confidence intervals. We then take a closer look at deep evidential regression, which, to our knowledge, is applied comprehensively for the first time to the HPE problem. Experimental results indicate that DER behaves as expected in challenging and adverse conditions commonly occurring in HPE and that the predicted uncertainties match their purported aleatoric and epistemic sources. Notably, DER achieves smooth uncertainty estimates without the need for a costly sampling step, making it an attractive candidate for uncertainty estimation on resource-limited platforms.
Smart cities are considered data factories that generate an enormous amount of data from various sources. In fact data is the backbone of any smart services. Therefore, the strategic beneficial handling of this digital capital is crucial for cities. Some smart city pioneers have already written down their approach to data in the form of data strategies, but what should a city's data strategy include, and how can the goals and measures defined in the strategies be operationalized? This paper addresses these questions by looking closely at the data strategies of cities in Germany and the top three countries in the EU Digital Economy and Society Index. The in-depth analysis of 8 city data strategies has yielded 11 dimensions that cities should consider in their data strategy. These are relevance of data, principles, methods, data sharing, technology, data culture, data ethics, organizational structure, data security and privacy, collaborations, data literacy. In addition, data governance is a concept to put these 11 strategic dimensions into practice through standardization measures, training programs, and defining roles and responsibilities by developing a data catalog.
Platforms feature increasingly complex architectures with regard to interconnecting with other digital platforms as well as with a variety of devices and services. This development also impacts the structure of digital platform ecosystems and forces providers of these services, devices, and services to incorporate this complexity in their decision-making. To contribute to the existing body of knowledge on measuring ecosystem complexity, the present research proposes two key artefacts based on ecosystem intelligence: On the one hand, complementarity graphs represent ecosystems with an ecosystem's functional modules as vertices and complementarities as edges. The nodes carry information about the category membership of the module. On the other hand, a process is suggested that can collect important information for ecosystem intelligence using proxies and web scraping. Our approach allows replacing data, which today is largely unavailable due to competitive reasons. We demonstrated the use of the artefacts in category-oriented complementarity maps that aggregate the information from complementarity graphs and support decision-making. They show which combination of module categories creates strong and weak complementarities. The paper evaluates complementarity maps and the data collection process by creating category-oriented complementarity graphs on the Alexa skill ecosystem and concludes with a call to pursue more research based on functional ecosystem intelligence.
The fifth generation of mobile communication (5G) is a wireless technology developed to provide reliable, fast data transmission for industrial applications, such as autonomous mobile robots and connect cyber-physical systems using Internet of Things (IoT) sensors. In this context, private 5G networks enable the full performance of industrial applications built on dedicated 5G infrastructures. However, emerging wireless communication technologies such as 5G are a complex and challenging topic for training in learning factories, often lacking physical or visual interaction. Therefore, this paper aims to develop a real-time performance monitoring system of private 5G networks and different industrial 5G devices to visualise the performance and impact factors influencing 5G for students and future connectivity experts. Additionally, this paper presents the first long-term measurements of private 5G networks and shows the performance gap between the actual and targeted performance of private 5G networks.
Most Question-answering (QA) systems rely on training data to reach their optimal performance. However, acquiring training data for supervised systems is both time-consuming and resource-intensive. To address this, in this paper, we propose TFCSG, an unsupervised similar question retrieval approach that leverages pre-trained language models and multi-task learning. Firstly, topic keywords in question sentences are extracted sequentially based on a latent topic-filtering algorithm to construct unsupervised training corpus data. Then, the multi-task learning method is used to build the question retrieval model. There are three tasks designed. The first is a short sentence contrastive learning task. The second is the question sentence and its corresponding topic sequence similarity judgment task. The third is using question sentences to generate their corresponding topic sequence task. The three tasks are used to train the language model in parallel. Finally, similar questions are obtained by calculating the cosine similarity between sentence vectors. The comparison experiment on public question datasets that TFCSG outperforms the comparative unsupervised baseline method. And there is no need for manual marking, which greatly saves human resources.
Development of an IoT-based inventory management solution and training module using smart bins
(2023)
Flexibility, transparency and changeability of warehouse environments are playing an increasingly important role to achieve a cost-efficient production of small batch sizes. This results in increasing requirements for warehouses in terms of flexibility, scalability, reconfigurability and transparency of material and information flows to deal with large number of different components and variable material and information flows due to small batch sizes. Therefore, an IoT-based inventory management solution and training module has been developed, implemented and validated at Werk150 – the Factory on campus of the ESB Business School. Key elements of the developed solution are smart bins using weight mats to track the bin’s content and additional sensors and buttons which are connected to an IoT – Hub to collect data of material consumption and manual handling operations. The use of weight mats for the smart bins offers the possibility to measure the container content independent of the specific component geometry and thus for a variety of components based on the specific component weights. The developed solution enables focusing on key for success elements of the system to provide synchronization of the flow of materials and information resulting an increase of flexibility and significantly higher transparency of the material flow. AIbased algorithms are applied to analyse the gathered data and to initiate process optimizations by providing the logistics decision makers a profound and transparent basis for decision making. In order to provide students and industry visitors of the learning factory with the necessary competences and to support the transfer into practice, a training module on IoT-based inventory management was developed and implemented.
Large critical systems, such as those created in the space domain, are usually developed by a large number of organizations and, furthermore, they have to comply with standards. Yet, the different stakeholders often do not have a common understanding of the needed quality of requirements specifications. Achieving such a common understanding is a laborious process that is currently not sufficiently supported. Moreover, such a common understanding must be aligned with the standards. In this paper, we present an approach that can be used to align the different stakeholder perceptions regarding the quality of requirements specifications. Existing quality models for requirements specifications are analyzed for equivalences, and transferred into a common representation, the so-called Aligned Quality Map (AQM). Furthermore, a process is defined that supports the alignment of different stakeholder perspectives with regard to the quality of requirements specifications using AQM, which is validated in a case study in the context of European space projects. AQM has been created and populated with an initial set of quality models. It is designed in such way that it can be extended to include further quality models. The case study has shown that an alignment of different stakeholder perspectives and the quality model of the European Cooperation for Space Standardization using AQM is feasible. The approach allows for aligning different stakeholder perspectives for a common understanding of the quality of requirements specifications in the context of standards. Furthermore, AQM supports the assessment of requirements specifications.
In the context of digital transformation, having a data-driven organizational culture has been recognized as an important factor for data analytics capabilities, innovativeness and competitive advantage of firms. However, the current literature on data-driven culture (DDC) is fragmented, lacking both a synthesis of findings and a theoretical foundation. Therefore, the aim of this work has been to develop a comprehensive framework for understanding DDC and the mechanisms that can be used to embed such a culture in organizations as well as structuring prior dispersed findings on the topic. Based on the foundation of organizational culture theory, we employed a Design Science Research (DSR) approach using a systematic literature review and expert interviews to build and evaluate a transformation-oriented framework. This research contributes to knowledge by synthesizing previously dispersed knowledge in a holistic framework, as well as, by providing a conceptual framework to guide the transformation towards a DDC.
The performance and scalability of modern data-intensive systems are limited by massive data movement of growing datasets across the whole memory hierarchy to the CPUs. Such traditional processor-centric DBMS architectures are bandwidth- and latency-bound. Processing-in-Memory (PIM) designs seek to overcome these limitations by integrating memory and processing functionality on the same chip. PIM targets near- or in-memory data processing, leveraging the greater in-situ parallelism and bandwidth.
In this paper, we introduce pimDB and provide an initial comparison of processor-centric and PIM-DBMS approaches under different aspects, such as scalability and parallelism, cache-awareness, or PIM-specific compute/bandwidth tradeoffs. The evaluation is performed end-to-end on a real PIM hardware system from UPMEM.
Software development teams have to face stress caused by deadlines, staff turnover, or individual differences in commitment, expertise, and time zones. While students are typically taught the theory of software project management, their exposure to such stress factors is usually limited. However, preparing students for the stress they will have to endure once they work in project teams is important for their own sake, as well as for the sake of team performance in the face of stress. Team performance has been linked to the diversity of software development teams, but little is known about how diversity influences the stress experienced in teams. In order to shed light on this aspect, we provided students with the opportunity to self-experience the basics of project management in self-organizing teams, and studied the impact of six diversity dimensions on team performance, coping with stressors, and positive perceived learning effects. Three controlled experiments at two universities with a total of 65 participants suggest that the social background impacts the perceived stressors the most, while age and work experience have the highest impact on perceived learnings. Most diversity dimensions have a medium correlation with the quality of work, yet no significant relation to the team performance. This lays the foundation to improve students’ training for software engineering teamwork based on their diversity-related needs and to create diversity-sensitive awareness among educators, employers and researchers.
For large-scale processes as implemented in organizations that develop software in regulated domains, comprehensive software process models are implemented, e.g., for compliance requirements. Creating and evolving such processes is demanding and requires software engineers having substantial modeling skills to create consistent and certifiable processes. While teaching process engineering to students, we observed issues in providing and explaining models. In this paper, we present an exploratory study in which we aim to shed light on the challenges students face when it comes to modeling. Our findings show that students are capable of doing basic modeling tasks, yet, fail in utilizing models correctly. We conclude that the required skills, notably abstraction and solution development, are underdeveloped due to missing practice and routine. Since modeling is key to many software engineering disciplines, we advocate for intensifying modeling activities in teaching.
The world is becoming increasingly digital. People have become used to learning and interacting with the world around them through technology, accelerated even further by the Covid-19 pandemic. This is especially relevant to the generation currently entering education systems and the workforce. Considering digital aids and methods of learning are important for future learning. The increasing online learning needs open the case for integrating digital learning aspects such as serious gaming within education and training systems. Learning factories fall amongst the education and training systems that can benefit from integration with digital learning extensions. Digital capabilities such as digital twins and models further enable the exploration of integrating digital serious games as an extension of learning factories. Since learning factories are meant for a range of different learning, training, and research purposes, such serious games need to be adaptable across stakeholder perspectives to maximize the value gained from the time and cost invested into such design and development. Research into the development of adaptive serious games for multiple stakeholder perspectives must first determine whether such development can be developed that reaches the objectives set for different included stakeholder perspectives. The purpose of this research is to investigate this at the hand of the practical development of a digital adaptive serious game for stakeholder perspectives.
Product engineering and subsequent phases of product lifecycles are predominantly managed in isolation. Companies therefore do not fully exploit potentials through using data from smart factories and product usage. The novel intelligent and integrated Product Lifecycle Management (i²PLM) describes an approach that uses these data for product engineering. This paper describes the i²PLM, shows the cause-and-effect relationships in this context and presents in detail the validation of the approach. The i²PLM is applied and validated on a smart product in an industrial research environment. Here, the subsequent generation of a smart lunchbox is developed based on production and sensor data. The results of the validation give indications for further improvements of the i²PLM. This paper describes how to integrate the i²PLM into a learning factory.
Near-Data Processing (NDP) is a key computing paradigm for reducing the ever growing time and energy costs of data transport versus computations. With their flexibility, FPGAs are an especially suitable compute element for NDP scenarios. Even more promising is the exploitation of novel and future non-volatile memory (NVM) technologies for NDP, which aim to achieve DRAM-like latencies and throughputs, while providing large capacity non-volatile storage.
Experimentation in using FPGAs in such NVM-NDP scenarios has been hindered, though, by the fact that the NVM devices/FPGA boards are still very rare and/or expensive. It thus becomes useful to emulate the access characteristics of current and future NVMs using off-the-shelf DRAMs. If such emulation is sufficiently accurate, the resulting FPGA-based NDP computing elements can be used for actual full-stack hardware/software benchmarking, e.g., when employed to accelerate a database.
For this use, we present NVMulator, an open-source easy-to-use hardware emulation module that can be seamlessly inserted between the NDP processing elements on the FPGA and a conventional DRAM-based memory system. We demonstrate that, with suitable parametrization, the emulated NVM can come very close to the performance characteristics of actual NVM technologies, specifically Intel Optane. We achieve 0.62% and 1.7% accuracy for cache line sized accesses for read and write operations, while utilizing only 0.54% of LUT logic resources on a Xilinx/AMD AU280 UltraScale+ FPGA board. We consider both file-system as well as database access patterns, examining the operation of the RocksDB database when running on real or emulated Optane-technology memories.
Das Motto der diesjahrigen Informatics Inside wird, wie ich finde, in beeindruckender Weise gegenwärtig durch Werkzeuge der generativen KI demonstriert. ChatGPT, Midjourney und Co. ermöglichen uns eine innovative Interaktion mit Information, die uns auffordert unsere bisherigen Vorstellungen von Erkenntnisfähigkeit und Wertschöpfung zu überdenken. Diese Notwendigkeit ist in der Informatik zwar bereits seit den 1930er Jahren bekannt, aber erst die praktische Umsetzung mit modernen Computern macht die formalen Überlegungen hierzu erfahrbar. Daraus resultierende Verunsicherungen, beispielsweise im Hinblick auf Arbeitsplatze, sind gleichermaßen Herausforderung und Chance dieses wichtige Thema einer breiten Öffentlichkeit bekannt zu machen. Hierbei wird einmal mehr deutlich wie tiefgreifend die Informatik in unsere Leben hineinwirkt und welche Verantwortung damit verbunden ist. Vor diesem großen Hintergrund könnte der Hinweis auf Bits und Bytes im Tagungsmotto fast schon wie ein unbedeutendes Detail wirken, was jedoch weit gefehlt wäre. Folgen aus Null und Eins bilden nach wie vor die Bausteine der Informatik und es ist die Aufgabe der angewandten Informatik hieraus nützliche und sinnvolle Anwendungen zu kombinieren.
Die Informatics Inside bietet hierfür einen entsprechenden Rahmen bereits in der akademischen Ausbildung. Unsere Studierenden planen, organisieren und gestalten diese Tagung jedes Jahr eigenstandig. Auch die Themen für die Fachbeiträge wurden von den Studierenden eigenstandig ausgewählt. Aus meiner Sicht bilden die resultierenden Ausarbeitungen in diesem Tagungsband die spannende Vielfalt von Anwendungsthemen des Human Centered Computings sehr gut ab. Dabei zeigt sich ebenfalls deutlich die Bereitschaft unserer Studierenden, die Verantwortung für eine sinnvolle und kreative Gestaltung der digitalen Zukunft zu übernehmen.
Reutlingen, den 15.11.2023 Prof. Dr. rer. medic. Christian Thies
OpenAPI, WADL, RAML, and API Blueprint are popular formats for documenting Web APIs. Although these formats are in general both human and machine-readable, only the part of the format describing the syntax of a Web API is machine-understandable. Descriptions, which explain the meaning and purpose of Web API elements, are embedded as natural language text snippets into documents and target human readers but not machines. To enable machines to read and process these state-of-practice Web API documentation, we propose a Transformer model that solves the generic task of identifying a Web API element within a syntax structure that matches a natural language query. For our first prototype, we focus on the Web API integration task of matching output with input parameters and fined-tuned a pre-trained CodeBERT model to the downstream task of question answering with samples from 2,321 OpenAPI documentation. We formulate the original question answering problem as a multiple choice task: given a semantic natural language description of an output parameter (question) and the syntax of the input schema (paragraph), the model chooses the input parameter (answer) in the schema that best matches the description. The paper describes the data preparation, tokenization, and fine-tuning process as well as discusses possible applications of our model as part of a recommender system. Furthermore, we evaluate the generalizability and the robustness of our fine-tuned model, with the result that it achieves an accuracy of 81.46% correctly chosen parameters.
What might the attendee be able to do after being in your session?
Our work shows how to connect intra-operative devices via IEEE 11073 Service-oriented Device Connectivity (SDC).
Description of the Problem or Gap
Standardized device communication is essential for interoperability, availability of device data, and therefore for the intelligent operating room (OR) and arising solutions. The SDC standard was developed to make information from medical devices available in a uniform manner and enable interoperability. Existing devices are rarely SDC-capable and need interfaces to be interoperable via SDC.
Methods: What did you do to address the problem or gap?
We conceived an SDC-based architecture consisting of a service provider and service consumer. In our concept, the service provider is connected to the medical device and capable to translate the proprietary protocol of the device into SDC and vice versa. The service consumer is used to request or send information via the SDC protocol to the service provider and can function as a uniform bidirectional interface (e.g. for displaying or controlling). This concept was exemplarily demonstrated with the patient monitor MX800 of Philips to retrieve the device data (e.g. vital parameters) via SDC and partly for the operating light marLED X of KLS Martin Group.
Results: What was the outcome(s) of what you did to address the problem or gap?
The patient monitor MX800 was connected to a Raspberry Pi (RPi) via LAN, on which the service provider is running. The python script on the RPi establishes a connection to the monitor and translates incoming and outgoing messages from the proprietary protocol to SDC and vice versa to/from the service consumer. The service consumer is running on a laptop and acts as a simulation for different kinds of systems that want to get vital parameters or other information from the patient monitor. The operating light marLED X was connected to an RPi via USB-to-RS232. A python script on the RPi establishes a connection to the light and makes it possible via proprietary commands to get information of the light (e.g. status) and to control it (e.g. toggle the light, increment the intensity). A translation to SDC is not integrated yet.
Discussion of Results
Our practical implementation shows that medical devices can be accessed via external connections to get device data and control the device via commands. The example SDC implementation of the patient monitor MX800 makes it possible to request its data via the standardized communication protocol SDC. This is also possible for the operating light marLED X if its proprietary protocol is analyzed to be translatable to/from SDC. This would allow to control the device from an external system, or automatically depending on the status of the ongoing procedure. The advantage is, that existing intra-operative devices can be extended by a service provider which is capable of translating the proprietary protocol of the device in SDC and vice versa. This enables interoperability and an intelligent OR that, for example, is aware of all devices, their status, and data and can use this information to optimally support the surgeons and their team (e.g. provision of information, automated documentation). This interoperability allows that future innovations merely need to understand the SDC protocol instead of all vendor-dependent communication protocols.
Conclusion
Standardized device communication is essential to reach interoperability, and therefore intelligent ORs. Our contribution addresses the possibility of subsequently making medical devices SDC-capable. This may eliminate the need of understanding all the different proprietary protocols when developing new innovative solutions for the OR.
In recent years, 3D facial reconstructions from single images have garnered significant interest. Most of the approaches are based on 3D Morphable Model (3DMM) fitting to reconstruct the 3D face shape. Concurrently, the adoption of Generative Adversarial Networks (GAN) has been gaining momentum to improve the texture of reconstructed faces. In this paper, we propose a fundamentally different approach to reconstructing the 3D head shape from a single image by harnessing the power of GAN. Our method predicts three maps of normal vectors of the head’s frontal, left, and right poses. We are thus presenting a model-free method that does not require any prior knowledge of the object’s geometry to be reconstructed.
The key advantage of our proposed approach is the substantial improvement in reconstruction quality compared to existing methods, particularly in the case of facial regions that are self-occluded in the input image. Our method is not limited to 3d face reconstruction. It is generic and applicable to multiple kinds of 3D objects. To illustrate the versatility of our method, we demonstrate its efficacy in reconstructing the entire human body.
By delivering a model-free method capable of generating high-quality 3D reconstructions, this paper not only advances the field of 3D facial reconstruction but also provides a foundation for future research and applications spanning multiple object types. The implications of this work have the potential to extend far beyond facial reconstruction, paving the way for innovative solutions and discoveries in various domains.
The aim of this work is the development of artificial intelligence (AI) application to support the recruiting process that elevates the domain of human resource management by advancing its capabilities and effectiveness. This affects recruiting processes and includes solutions for active sourcing, i.e. active recruitment, pre-sorting, evaluating structured video interviews and discovering internal training potential. This work highlights four novel approaches to ethical machine learning. The first is precise machine learning for ethically relevant properties in image recognition, which focuses on accurately detecting and analysing these properties. The second is the detection of bias in training data, allowing for the identification and removal of distortions that could skew results. The third is minimising bias, which involves actively working to reduce bias in machine learning models. Finally, an unsupervised architecture is introduced that can learn fair results even without ground truth data. Together, these approaches represent important steps forward in creating ethical and unbiased machine learning systems.
Enterprises and societies currently face essential challenges, and digital transformation can contribute to their resolution. Enterprise architecture (EA) is useful for promoting digital transformation in global companies and information societies covering ecosystem partners. The advancement of new business models can be promoted with digital platforms and architectures for Industry 4.0 and Society 5.0. Therefore, products from the sector of healthcare, manufacturing and energy, etc. can increase in value. The adaptive integrated digital architecture framework (AIDAF) for Industry 4.0 and the design thinking approach is expected to promote and implement the digital platforms and digital products for healthcare, manufacturing and energy communities more efficiently. In this paper, we propose various cases of digital transformation where digital platforms and products are designed and evaluated for digital IT, digital manufacturing and digital healthcare with Industry 4.0 and Society 5.0. The vision of AIDAF applications to perform digital transformation in global companies is explained and referenced, extended toward the digitalized ecosystems such as Society 5.0 and Industry 4.0.
Current advances in Artificial Intelligence (AI) combined with other digitalization efforts are changing the role of technology in service ecosystems. Human-centered intelligent systems and services are the target of many current digitalization efforts and part of a massive digital transformation based on digital technologies. Artificial intelligence, in particular, is having a powerful impact on new opportunities for shared value creation and the development of smart service ecosystems. Motivated by experiences and observations from digitalization projects, this paper presents new methodological experiences from academia and practice on a joint view of digital strategy and architecture of intelligent service ecosystems and explores the impact of digitalization based on real case study results. Digital enterprise architecture models serve as an integral representation of business, information, and technology perspectives of intelligent service-based enterprise systems to support management and development. This paper focuses on the novel aspect of closely aligned digital strategy and architecture models for intelligent service ecosystems and highlights the fundamental business mechanism of AI-based value creation, the corresponding digital architecture, and management models. We present key strategy-oriented architecture model perspectives for intelligent systems.
In today’s education, healthcare, and manufacturing sectors, organizations and information societies are discussing new enhancements to corporate structure and process efficiency using digital platforms. These enhancements can be achieved using digital tools. Industry 5.0 and Society 5.0 give several potentials for businesses to enhance the adaptability and efficacy of their industrial processes, paving the door for developing new business models facilitated by digital platforms. Society 5.0 can contribute to a super-intelligent society that includes the healthcare industry. In the past decade, the Internet of Things, Big Data Analytics, Neural Networks, Deep Learning, and Artificial Intelligence (AI) have revolutionized our approach to various job sectors, from manufacturing and finance to consumer products. AI is developing quickly and efficiently. We have heard of the latest artificial intelligence chatbot, ChatGPT. OpenAI created this, which has taken the internet by storm. We tested the effectiveness of a considerable language model referred to as ChatGPT on four critical questions concerning “Society 5.0”, “Healthcare 5.0”, “Industry,” and “Future Education” from the perspectives of Age 5.0.
Die folgende Veröffentlichung ist ein Konferenzband, der im Sommersemester 2023 stattgefundenen Studierendenkonferenz Informatics Inisde, die für die Fakultät Informatik und die Studierenden ein besonderes Ereignis ist. Mit der Veröffentlichung Ihrer Artikel in diesem Konferenzband haben die Studierende eine handfeste Publikation, die durch ein Peer-Review inhaltlich qualitätsgesichert ist.
In diesem Jahr gibt es eine neue Herausforderung: Seit dem Jahr 2022 steht ChatGPT von OpenAI zur Verfügung, das verblüffende Texte mit nachvollziehbarer Argumentation verfassen kann. Eine Nutzung des Werkzeugs für die Erstellung eines wissenschaftlichen Artikels ist denkbar und gleichzeitig schwer zu beweisen. Ein kritischer Umgang mit Technologie ist wichtiger als ein pauschales Verbot. Dennoch braucht es Regeln im Umgang mit Künstlicher Intelligenz, die einen ethisch richtigen Einsatz solcher Werkzeuge begrenzt. Umso wichtiger ist es, dass umfassender Sachverstand und kritisches Denken vermittelt wird, damit mögliche Fehler oder Plagiatsfälle entlarvt werden können.
Damit sind wir mitten im Thema: Informatik ist allgegenwärtig und in äußerst vielen Produkten in der Industrie und des täglichen Lebens vorhanden. Die vielfältigen Aufsätze dieser Konferenz zeigen das. Sehen Sie selbst, wie breit die Verfahren, Algorithmen, Methoden und Technologieanwendungen sind: Von Augmented-Reality, über Videoübertragung im Operationssaal, hin zu Standards für strukturierten Daten und Künstlicher Intelligenz zeigen die Beiträge doch, wie weit läufig die Informatik inzwischen ist. Allen gemeinsam ist eines: Die menschzentrierte Anwendung von Technologie, die in dem Master Human-centered Computing als Basis aller Veranstaltungen aufgefasst werden.
Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are unique digital assets that have recently gained significant popularity, particularly in the digital art sector. The success of NFTs and other blockchain-based innovations depends on their ac-acceptance and use by consumers. This study aims to understand the impact of moral values on the acceptance of NFTs. Based on a quantitative survey with over 800 complete responses, the analysis shows that moral aspects of NFTs are indeed important for potential users. However, there is an attitude-behavior gap, as the positive impact of moral values on the intention to use NFTs is not reflected in the actual current usage of NFTs by the respondents. This study contributes to knowledge by providing new empirical data on the acceptance of NFTs and highlighting the role of moral values on the acceptance decision.
Digital twins deployed in production are important in practice and interesting for research. Currently, mostly structured data coming from e.g., sensors and timestamps of related stations, are integrated into Digital Twins. However, semi- and unstructured data are also important to display the current status of a digital twin (e.g., of a machinery or produced good). Process Mining and Text Mining in combination can be used to support the use of log file data to understand the current state of the process as well as highlight issues. Therefore, issue related reactions can be taken more quickly, targeted and cost oriented. Applying a design science research approach; here a prototype as an artefact based on derived requirements is developed. This prototype helps to understand and to clarify the possibilities of Process Mining and Text Mining based on log data for production related Digital Twins. Contributions for practice and research are described. Furthermore, limitations of the research and future opportunities are pointed out.
AI-based prediction and recommender systems are widely used in various industry sectors. However, general acceptance of AI-enabled systems is still widely uninvestigated. Therefore, firstly we conducted a survey with 559 respondents. Findings suggested that AI-enabled systems should be fair, transparent, consider personality traits and perform tasks efficiently. Secondly, we developed a system for the Facial Beauty Prediction (FBP) benchmark that automatically evaluates facial attractiveness. As our previous experiments have proven, these results are usually highly correlated with human ratings. Consequently they also reflect human bias in annotations. An upcoming challenge for scientists is to provide training data and AI algorithms that can withstand distorted information. In this work, we introduce AntiDiscriminationNet (ADN), a superior attractiveness prediction network. We propose a new method to generate an unbiased convolutional neural network (CNN) to improve the fairn ess of machine learning in facial dataset. To train unbiased networks we generate synthetic images and weight training data for anti-discrimination assessments towards different ethnicities. Additionally, we introduce an approach with entropy penalty terms to reduce the bias of our CNN. Our research provides insights in how to train and build fair machine learning models for facial image analysis by minimising implicit biases. Our AntiDiscriminationNet finally outperforms all competitors in the FBP benchmark by achieving a Pearson correlation coefficient of PCC = 0.9601.
The volume includes papers presented at the International KES Conference on Human Centred Intelligent Systems 2023 (KES HCIS 2023), held in Rome, Italy on June 14–16, 2023. This book highlights new trends and challenges in intelligent systems, which play an important part in the digital transformation of many areas of science and practice. It includes papers offering a deeper understanding of the human-centred perspective on artificial intelligence, of intelligent value co-creation, ethics, value-oriented digital models, transparency, and intelligent digital architectures and engineering to support digital services and intelligent systems, the transformation of structures in digital businesses and intelligent systems based on human practices, as well as the study of interaction and the co-adaptation of humans and systems.
Recent work on database application development platforms has sought to include a declarative formulation of a conceptual data model in the application code, using annotations or attributes. Some recent work has used metadata to include the details of such formulations in the physical database, and this approach brings significant advantages in that the model can be enforced across a range of applications for a single database. In previous work, we have discussed the advantages for enterprise integration of typed graph data models (TGM), which can play a similar role in graphical databases, leveraging the existing support for the unified modelling language UML. Ideally, the integration of systems designed with different models, for example, graphical and relational database, should also be supported. In this work, we implement this approach, using metadata in a relational database management system (DBMS).
The Fifteenth International Conference on Advances in Databases, Knowledge, and Data Applications (DBKDA 2023), held between March 13 – 17, 2023, continued a series of international events covering a large spectrum of topics related to advances in fundamentals on databases, evolution of relation between databases and other domains, data base technologies and content processing, as well as specifics in applications domains databases.
Advances in different technologies and domains related to databases triggered substantial improvements for content processing, information indexing, and data, process and knowledge mining. The push came from Web services, artificial intelligence, and agent technologies, as well as from the generalization of the XML adoption.
High-speed communications and computations, large storage capacities, and load-balancing for distributed databases access allow new approaches for content processing with incomplete patterns, advanced ranking algorithms and advanced indexing methods.
Evolution on e-business, ehealth and telemedicine, bioinformatics, finance and marketing, geographical positioning systems put pressure on database communities to push the ‘de facto’ methods to support new requirements in terms of scalability, privacy, performance, indexing, and heterogeneity of both content and technology.
The Fourteenth International Conference on Advances in Databases, Knowledge, and Data Applications (DBKDA 2022), held between May 22 – 26, 2022, continued a series of international events covering a large spectrum of topics related to advances in fundamentals on databases, evolution of relation between databases and other domains, data base technologies and content processing, as well as specifics in applications domains databases.
Advances in different technologies and domains related to databases triggered substantial improvements for content processing, information indexing, and data, process and knowledge mining. The push came from Web services, artificial intelligence, and agent technologies, as well as from the generalization of the XML adoption.
High-speed communications and computations, large storage capacities, and load-balancing for distributed databases access allow new approaches for content processing with incomplete patterns, advanced ranking algorithms and advanced indexing methods.
Evolution on e-business, ehealth and telemedicine, bioinformatics, finance and marketing, geographical positioning systems put pressure on database communities to push the ‘de facto’ methods to support new requirements in terms of scalability, privacy, performance, indexing, and heterogeneity of both content and technology.
We introduce bloomRF as a unified method for approximate membership testing that supports both point- and range-queries. As a first core idea, bloomRF introduces novel prefix hashing to efficiently encode range information in the hash-code of the key itself. As a second key concept, bloomRF proposes novel piecewisemonotone hash-functions that preserve local order and support fast range-lookups with fewer memory accesses. bloomRF has near-optimal space complexity and constant query complexity. Although, bloomRF is designed for integer domains, it supports floating-points, and can serve as a multi-attribute filter. The evaluation in RocksDB and in a standalone library shows that it is more efficient and outperforms existing point-range-filters by up to 4× across a range of settings and distributions, while keeping the false-positive rate low.
The aim of this paper is to show to what extent Artificial Intelligence can be used to optimize forecasting capability in procurement as well as to compare AI with traditional statistic methods. At the same time this article presents the status quo of the research project ANIMATE. The project applies Artificial Intelligence to forecast customer orders in medium-sized companies.
Precise forecasts are essential for companies. For planning, decision making and controlling. Forecasts are applied, e.g. in the areas of supply chain, production or purchasing. Medium-sized companies have major challenges in using suitable methods to improve their forecasting ability.
Companies often use proven methods such as classical statistics as the ARIMA algorithm. However, simple statistics often fail while applied for complex non-linear predictions.
Initial results show that even a simple MLP ANN produces better results than traditional statistic methods. Furthermore, a baseline (Implicit Sales Expectation) of the company was used to compare the performance. This comparison also shows that the proposed AI method is superior.
Until the developed method becomes part of corporate practice, it must be further optimized. The model has difficulties with strong declines, for example due to holidays. The authors are certain that the model can be further improved. For example, through more advanced methods, such as a FilterNet, but also through more data, such as external data on holiday periods.
Context: Companies that operate in the software-intensive business are confronted with high market dynamics, rapidly evolving technologies as well as fast-changing customer behavior. Traditional product roadmapping practices, such as fixed-time-based charts including detailed planned features, products, or services typically fail in such environments. Until now, the underlying reasons for the failure of product roadmaps in a dynamic and uncertain market environment are not widely analyzed and understood.
Objective: This paper aims to identify current challenges and pitfalls practitioners face when developing and handling product roadmaps in a dynamic and uncertain market environment.
Method: To reach our objective we conducted a grey literature review (GLR).
Results: Overall, we identified 40 relevant papers, from which we could extract 11 challenges of the application of product roadmapping in a dynamic and uncertain market environment. The analysis of the articles showed that the major challenges for practitioners originate from overcoming a feature-driven mindset, not including a lot of details in the product roadmap, and ensuring that the content of the roadmap is not driven by management or expert opinion.
Providing a digital infrastructure, platform technologies foster interfirm collaboration between loosely coupled companies, enabling the formation of ecosystems and building the organizational structure for value co-creation. Despite the known potential, the development of platform ecosystems creates new sources of complexity and uncertainty due to the involvement of various independent actors. For a platform ecosystem to succeed, it is essential that the platform ecosystem participants are aligned, coordinated, and given a common direction. Traditionally, product roadmaps have served these purposes during product development. A systematic mapping study was conducted to better understand how product roadmapping could be used in the dynamic environment of platform ecosystems. One result of the study is that there are hardly any concrete approaches for product roadmapping in platform ecosystems so far. However, many challenges on the topic are described in the literature from different perspectives. Based on the results of the systematic mapping study, a research agenda for product roadmapping in platform ecosystems is derived and presented.
Context: Nowadays the market environment is characterized by high uncertainties due to high market dynamics, confronting companies with new challenges in creating and updating product roadmaps. Most companies are still using traditional approaches which typically fail in such environments. Therefore, companies are seeking opportunities for new product roadmapping approaches.
Objective: This paper presents good practices to support companies better understand what factors are required to conduct a successful product roadmapping in a dynamic and uncertain market environment.
Method: Based on a grey literature review, essential aspects for conducting product roadmapping in a dynamic and uncertain market environment were identified. Expert workshops were then held with two researchers and three practitioners to develop best practices and the proposed approach for an outcome-driven roadmap. These results were then given to another set of practitioners and their perceptions were gathered through interviews.
Results: The study results in the development of 9 good practices that provide practitioners with insights into what aspects are crucial for product roadmapping in a dynamic and uncertain market environment. Moreover, we propose an approach to product roadmapping that includes providing a flexible structure and focusing on delivering value to the customer and the business. To ensure the latter, this approach consists of the main items outcome hypothesis, validated outcomes, and discovered outputs.
There is a growing consensus in research and practice that value-creating networks and ecosystems are supplementing the traditional distinction between the internal firm and market perspectives. To achieve joint value in ecosystems, it is crucial to align the various interests of independently acting ecosystem actors and create a common vision. In this paper, we argue that the ecosystem-wide use of product roadmaps may help with this. To get a better understanding of how roadmapping is conducted in the dynamic ecosystem environment, we systematize the main characteristics of product roadmaps and perform a conceptual comparison with the known challenges of ecosystem management. Comparing the two concepts of ecosystems and product roadmaps, we highlight the fit between the characteristics and objectives of the roadmaps and the challenges of ecosystem management. Hence, we propose to experiment with the ecosystem-wide use of product roadmaps as well as the empirical study of the challenges emerging in the process and the associated redesign of the roadmaps.
Theoretical foundation, effectiveness, and design artefact for machine learning service repositories
(2022)
Machine learning (ML) has played an important role in research in recent years. For companies that want to use ML, finding the algorithms and models that fit for their business is tedious. A review of the available literature on this problem indicates only a few research papers. Given this gap, the aim of this paper is to design an effective and easy-to-use ML service repository. The corresponding research is based on a multi-vocal literature analysis combined with design science research, addressing three research questions: (1) How is current white and gray literature on ML services structured with respect to repositories? (2) Which features are relevant for an effective ML service repository? (3) How is a prototype for an effective ML service repository conceptualized? Findings are relevant for the explanation of user acceptance of ML repositories. This is essential for corporate practice in order to create and use ML repositories effectively.
Today, companies face increasing market dynamics, rapidly evolving technologies, and rapid changes in customer behavior. Traditional approaches to product development typically fail in such environments and require companies to transform their often feature-driven mindset into a product-led mindset. A promising first step on the way to a product-led company is a better understanding of how product planning can be adapted to the requirements of an increasingly dynamic and uncertain market environment in the sense of product roadmapping. The authors developed the DEEP product roadmap assessment tool to help companies evaluate their current product roadmap practices and identify appropriate actions to transition to a more product-led company. Objective: The goal of this paper is to gain insight into the applicability and usefulness of version 1.1 of the DEEP model. In addition, the benefits, and implications of using the DEEP model in corporate contexts will be explored. Method: We conducted a multiple case study in which participants were observed using the DEEP model. We then interviewed each participant to understand their perceptions of the DEEP model. In addition, we conducted interviews with each company's product management department to learn how the application of the DEEP model influenced their attitudes toward product roadmapping. Results: The study showed that by applying the DEEP model, participants better understood which artifacts and methods were critical to product roadmapping success in a dynamic and uncertain market environment. In addition, the application of the DEEP model helped convince management and other stakeholders of the need to change current product roadmapping practices. The application also proved to be a suitable starting point for the transformation in the participating companies.
The energy turnaround, digitalization and decreasing revenues forces enterprises in the energy domain to develop new business models. Following a Design Science Research approach, we showed in two action research projects that businesses models in the energy domain result in complex ecosystems with multiple actors. Additionally, we identified that municipal utilities have problems with the systematic development of business models. In order to solve the problem, we captured together with the partners of the enterprises the requirements in a second phase. Further we developed a method which consist of the following components: Method for the creative development of a new business model in form of a Business Model Canvas (BMC). A mapping between the e3Value ontology and the BMC for modelling a business ecosystem. The Business Model Configurator (BMConfig) prototype for modelling and simulating the e3Value-Ontology. The Business model can be quantified and analyzed for its viability. We demonstrate the feasibility of our approach in business model of a power community.
The rapid development and growth of knowledge has resulted in a rich stream of literature on various topics. Information systems (IS) research is becoming increasingly extensive, complex, and heterogeneous. Therefore, a proper understanding and timely analysis of the existing body of knowledge are important to identify emerging topics and research gaps. Despite the advances of information technology in the context of big data, machine learning, and text mining, the implementation of systematic literature reviews (SLRs) is in most cases still a purely manual task. This might lead to serious shortcomings of SLRs in terms of quality and time. The outlined approach in this paper supports the process of SLRs with machine learning techniques. For this purpose, we develop a framework with embedded steps of text mining, cluster analysis, and network analysis to analyze and structure a large amount of research literature. Although the framework is presented using IS research as an example, it is not limited to the IS field but can also be applied to other research areas.
With significant advancements in digital technologies, firms find themselves competing in an increasingly dynamic business environment. Therefore, the logic of business decisions is based on the agility to respond to emerging trends in a proactive way. By contrast, traditional IT governance (ITG) frameworks rely on hierarchy and standardized mechanisms to ensure better business/IT alignment. This conflict leads to a call for an ambidextrous governance, in which firms alternate between stability and agility in their ITG mechanisms. Accordingly, this research aims to explore how agility might be integrated in ITG. A quantitative research strategy is implemented to explore the impact of agility on the causal relationship among ITG, business/IT alignment, and firm performance. The results show that the integration of agile ITG mechanisms contributes significantly to the explanation of business/IT alignment. As such, firms need to develop a dual governance model powered by traditional and agile ITG mechanisms.
Data governance have been relevant for companies for a long time. Yet, in the broad discussion on smart cities, research on data governance in particular is scant, even though data governance plays an essential role in an environment with multiple stakeholders, complex IT structures and heterogeneous processes. Indeed, not only can a city benefit from the existing body of knowledge on data governance, but it can also make the appropriate adjustments for its digital transformation. Therefore, this literature review aims to spark research on urban data governance by providing an initial perspective for future studies. It provides a comprehensive overview of data governance and the relevant facets embedded in this strand of research. Furthermore, it provides a fundamental basis for future research on the development of an urban data governance framework.
Startups play a key role in software-based innovation. They make an important contribution to an economy’s ability to compete and innovate, and their importance will continue to grow due to increasing digitalization. However, the success of a startup depends primarily on market needs and the ability to develop a solution that is attractive enough for customers to choose. A sophisticated technical solution is usually not critical, especially in the early stages of a startup. It is not necessary to be an experienced software engineer to start a software startup. However, this can become problematic as the solution matures and software complexity increases. Based on a proposed solution for systematic software development for early-stage startups, in this paper, we present the key findings of a survey study to identify the methodological and technical priorities of software startups. Among other things, we found that requirements engineering and architecture pose challenges for startups. In addition, we found evidence that startups’ software development approaches do not tend to change over time. An early investment in a more scalable development approach could help avoid long-term software problems. To support such an investment, we propose an extended model for Entrepreneurial Software Engineering that provides a foundation for future research.
Organizations that operate under uncertainty need to cultivate their ability to manage their primary resource, knowledge, accordingly. Under such conditions, organizations are required to harvest knowledge from two sources: to explore knowledge that is to be found outside the organization as well as exploit knowledge that is contained within. In a knowledge management context these exploitation and exploration activities have been conceptualized as knowledge ambidexterity. While ambidexterity has been studied extensively in contexts as manufacturing or IT, the notion of knowledge ambidexterity remains scarce in current knowledge management research. This study illustrates knowledge ambidexterity and elaborates its positive impact on organizational performance. Our study furthermore answers the question of how the use of enterprise social media (ESM) can facilitate the performance effects of knowledge ambidexterity. Drawing on the theory of communication visibility, we argue that ESM (e.g., Microsoft Teams, Slack, etc.) allow employees to communicate unhindered while making these communications visible. This allows for capturing tacit knowledge within these communications - this form of knowledge is generally hard to codify and can be a source of competitive edge. With respect to knowledge ambidexterity, ESM use can capture tacit knowledge aspects originating from inside and outside the organization, which fosters the development of a competitive advantage and, thus, supports its positive effect on organizational performance. This paper contributes to IT-enabled ambidexterity research in two aspects: (1) It sheds light on knowledge ambidexterity and, thereby, addresses a major practical challenge for knowledge-intensive organizations, and (2) it elaborates on the effects that ESM use can have on the relationship between knowledge ambidexterity and organizational performance. This work-in-progress paper offers a better understanding of the phenomenon of ambidexterity in a knowledge context, while providing insights on the facilitating role of ESM. Our research serves as a foundation for future empirical examinations of the concept of knowledge ambidexterity.
Digital twins: a meta-review on their conceptualization, application, and reference architecture
(2022)
The concept of digital twins (DTs) is receiving increasing attention in research and management practice. However, various facets around the concept are blurry, including conceptualization, application areas, and reference architectures for DTs. A review of preliminary results regarding the emerging research output on DTs is required to promote further research and implementation in organizations. To do so, this paper asks four research questions: (1) How is the concept of DTs defined? (2) Which application areas are relevant for the implementation of DTs? (3) How is a reference architecture for DTs conceptualized? and (4) Which directions are relevant for further research on DTs? With regard to research methods, we conduct a meta-review of 14 systematic literature reviews on DTs. The results yield important insights for the current state of conceptualization, application areas, reference architecture, and future research directions on DTs.
The early involvement of experiences gained through intelligence and data analysis is becoming increasingly important in order to develop new products, leading to a completely different conception of product creation, development and engineering processes using the advantages that the dedication of the digital twin entails. Introducing a novel stage gate process in order to be holistically anchored in learning factories adopting idea generation and idea screening in an early stage, beta testing of first prototypes, technical implementation in real production scenarios, business analysis, market evaluation, pricing, service models as well as innovative social media portals. Corresponding product modelling in the sense of sustainability, circular economy, and data analytics forecasts the product on the market both before and after market launch with the interlinking of data interpretation nearby in real-time. The digital twin represents the link between the digital model and the digital shadow. Additionally, the connection of the digital twin with the product provides constantly updated operating status and process data as well as mapping of technical properties and real-world behaviours. A future-networking product, by embedded information technology with the ability to initiate and carry out one's own further development, is able to interact with people and environments and thus is relevant to the way of life of future generations. In today's development work for this new product creation approach, on one hand, "Werk150" is the object of the development itself and on the other hand the validation environment. In the next step, new learning modules and scenarios for trainings at master level will be derived from these findings.
Enterprises and societies currently face crucial challenges, while Society 5.0 can contribute to a supersmart society, especially for manufacturing and healthcare, and Industry 4.0 becomes important in the global manufacturing industry. Smart energy digital platforms are architected to manage energy supply efficiently. Furthermore, the above digital platforms are expected to collect various kinds of data and analyze Big Data for the trends in the sharing economy in ecosystems. The adaptive integrated digital architecture framework (AIDAF) for Design Thinking Approach with Risk Management is expected to make an alignment with digital IT strategy. In this paper, we propose that various energy management systems and related digital platforms are designed and implemented in an alignment to digital IT strategy for sharing economy toward Society 5.0, with the AIDAF framework for Design Thinking Approach with Risk Management. The vision of AIDAF applications to enable sharing economy and digital platforms is explained and extended in the context of Society 5.0. In addition, challenges and future activities for this area are discussed that cover the directions of smart energy for Society 5.0.
An autonomous vehicle is a robotic vehicle with decision and action capability capable of performing assigned tasks without or with minimal human intervention. Autonomous cars have been in development for many years. The Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE International) published in 2014 a classification in five levels of driving automation, with level 0 corresponding to completely manual driving, and level 5 to an ideal dream where the vehicle would be able to navigate entirely autonomously for all missions and in all environments. This work addressed the navigation of an autonomous vehicle in general. We focus on one of the most complex scenarios of the road network and crossing of road intersections. In this paper, the critical features of autonomous intelligent vehicles are reviewed. Furthermore, the associated problems are presented, and the most advanced solutions are derived. This article aims to allow a novice in this field to understand the different facets of localization and perception problems for autonomous vehicles.
Digital assistants like Alexa, Google Assistant or Siri have seen a large adoption over the past years. Using artificial intelligence (AI) technologies, they provide a vocal interface to physical devices as well as to digital services and have spurred an entire new ecosystem. This comprises the big tech companies themselves, but also a strongly growing community of developers that make these functionalities available via digital platforms. At present, only few research is available to understand the structure and the value creation logic of these AI-based assistant platforms and their ecosystem. This research adopts ecosystem intelligence to shed light on their structure and dynamics. It combines existing data collection methods with an automated approach that proves useful in deriving a network-based conceptual model of Amazon’s Alexa assistant platform and ecosystem. It shows that skills are a key unit of modularity in this ecosystem, which is linked to other elements such as service, data, and money flows. It also suggests that the topology of the Alexa ecosystem may be described using the criteria reflexivity, symmetry, variance, strength, and centrality of the skill coactivations. Finally, it identifies three ways to create and capture value on AI-based assistant platforms. Surprisingly only a few skills use a transactional business model by selling services and goods but many skills are complementary and provide information, configuration, and control services for other skill provider products and services. These findings provide new insights into the highly relevant ecosystems of AI-based assistant platforms, which might serve enterprises in developing their strategies in these ecosystems. They might also pave the way to a faster, data-driven approach for ecosystem intelligence.
The time has come : application of artificial intelligence in small- and medium-sized enterprises
(2022)
Artificial intelligence (AI) is not yet widely used in small- and medium-sized industrial enterprises (SME). The reasons for this are manifold and range from not understanding use cases, not enough trained employees, to too little data. This article presents a successful design-oriented case study at a medium-sized company, where the described reasons are present. In this study, future demand forecasts are generated based on historical demand data for products at a material number level using a gradient boosting machine (GBM). An improvement of 15% on the status quo (i.e. based on the root mean squared error) could be achieved with rather simple techniques. Hence, the motivation, the method, and the first results are presented. Concluding challenges, from which practical users should derive learning experiences and impulses for their own projects, are addressed.
Demand forecasting intermittent time series is a challenging business problem. Companies have difficulties in forecasting this particular form of demand pattern. On the one hand, it is characterized by many non-demand periods and therefore classical statistical forecasting algorithms, such as ARIMA, only work to a limited extent. On the other hand, companies often cannot meet the requirements for good forecasting models, such as providing sufficient training data. The recent major advances of artificial intelligence in applications are largely based on transfer learning. In this paper, we investigate whether this method, originating from computer vision, can improve the forecasting quality of intermittent demand time series using deep learning models. Our empirical results show that, in total, transfer learning can reduce the mean square error by 65 percent. We also show that especially short (65 percent reduction) and medium long (91 percent reduction) time series benefit from this approach.
Mobile apps for sustainability in grocery shopping: increasing acceptance through gameification
(2022)
Sustainability has become an important topic in social sciences research as well as in the societal debate. Research in general indicates a high sensitivity of sustainability issues in broad parts of the society, however a change of consumption habits can hardly be overserved. It can be argued that technology, such as mobile apps, can play an important role to increase more sustainable behaviors and consumption habits, as they facilitate such behaviors, bring transparency to an unclear field and reduce complexity. Our research hence approaches an important research gap, especially as currently existing apps show a lack of functionalities and UX. By using a Design Science Research (DSR) approach applying Chou’s Octalysis framework, we systematically analyzed eight apps in the field of sustainability and two general gamification apps as reference points complementing our findings with issues discussed in literature and could identify a broad range of functionalities. This comprehensive analysis allowed us to develop an initial mockup of a potential app, which then was tested within a user-group of ten users by using a semi structured interview approach. Our findings contribute to knowledge by highlighting the importance of user experience on the acceptance of mobile apps, as well as, by showcasing how gamification can contribute to a sustained use of mobile apps in this specific context.
Data analysis is becoming increasingly important to pursue organizational goals, especially in the context of Industry 4.0, where a wide variety of data is available. Here numerous challenges arise, especially when using unstructured data. However, this subject has not been focused by research so far. This research paper addresses this gap, which is interesting for science and practice as well. In a study three major challenges of using unstructured data has been identified: analytical know-how, data issues, variety. Additionally, measures how to improve the analysis of unstructured data in the industry 4.0 context are described. Therefore, the paper provides empirical insights about challenges and potential measures when analyzing unstructured data. The findings are presented in a framework, too. Hence, next steps of the research project and future research points become apparent.
The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of perceived stress on traffic and road safety. One of the leading causes of stress among drivers is the feeling of having a lack of control during the driving process. Stress can result in more traffic accidents, an increase in driver errors, and an increase in traffic violations. To study this phenomenon, the Stress Perceived Questionnaire (PSQ) was used to evaluate the perceived stress while driving in a simulation. The study was conducted with participants from Germany, and they were grouped into different categories based on their emotional stability. Each participant was monitored using wearable devices that measured their instantaneous heart rate (HR). The preference for wearable devices was due to their non-intrusive and portable nature. The results of this study provide an overview of how stress can affect traffic and road safety, which can be used for future research or to implement strategies to reduce road accidents and promote traffic safety.
Generating synthetic data is a relevant point in the machine learning community. As accessible data is limited, the generation of synthetic data is a significant point in protecting patients' privacy and having more possibilities to train a model for classification or other machine learning tasks. In this work, some generative adversarial networks (GAN) variants are discussed, and an overview is given of how generative adversarial networks can be used for data generation in different fields. In addition, some common problems of the GANs and possibilities to avoid them are shown. Different evaluation methods of the generated data are also described.
Sleep analysis using a Polysomnography system is difficult and expensive. That is why we suggest a non-invasive and unobtrusive measurement. Very few people want the cables or devices attached to their bodies during sleep. The proposed approach is to implement a monitoring system, so the subject is not bothered. As a result, the idea is a non-invasive monitoring system based on detecting pressure distribution. This system should be able to measure the pressure differences that occur during a single heartbeat and during breathing through the mattress. The system consists of two blocks signal acquisition and signal processing. This whole technology should be economical to be affordable enough for every user. As a result, preprocessed data is obtained for further detailed analysis using different filters for heartbeat and respiration detection. In the initial stage of filtration, Butterworth filters are used.
Determination of accelerometer sensor position for respiration rate detection: initial research
(2022)
Continuous monitoring of a patient's vital signs is essential in many chronic illnesses. The respiratory rate (RR) is one of the vital signs indicating breathing diseases. This article proposes the initial investigation for determining the accelerometric sensor position of a non-invasive and unobtrusive respiratory rate monitoring system. This research aims to determine the sensor position in relation to the patient, which can provide the most accurate values of the mentioned physiological parameter. In order to achieve the result, the particular system setup, including a mechanical sensor holder construction was used. The breathing signals from 5 participants were analyzed corresponding to the relaxed state. The main criterion for selecting a suitable sensor position was each patient's average acceleration amplitude excursion, which corresponds to the respiratory signal. As a result, we provided one more defined important parameter for the considered system, which was not determined before.
Today many scientific works are using deep learning algorithms and time series, which can detect physiological events of interest. In sleep medicine, this is particularly relevant in detecting sleep apnea, specifically in detecting obstructive sleep apnea events. Deep learning algorithms with different architectures are used to achieve decent results in accuracy, sensitivity, etc. Although there are models that can reliably determine apnea and hypopnea events, another essential aspect to consider is the explainability of these models, i.e., why a model makes a particular decision. Another critical factor is how these deep learning models determine how severe obstructive sleep apnea is in patients based on the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI). Deep learning models trained by two approaches for AHI determination are exposed in this work. Approaches vary depending on the data format the models are fed: full-time series and window-based time series.
Sleep is essential to existence, much like air, water, and food, as we spend nearly one-third of our time sleeping. Poor sleep quality or disturbed sleep causes daytime solemnity, which worsens daytime activities' mental and physical qualities and raises the risk of accidents. With advancements in sensor and communication technology, sleep monitoring is moving out of specialized clinics and into our everyday homes. It is possible to extract data from traditional overnight polysomnographic recordings using more basic tools and straightforward techniques. Ballistocardiogram is an unobtrusive, non-invasive, simple, and low-cost technique for measuring cardiorespiratory parameters. In this work, we present a sensor board interface to facilitate the communication between force sensitive resistor sensor and an embedded system to provide a high-performing prototype with an efficient signal-to-noise ratio. We have utilized a multi-physical-layer approach to locate each layer on top of another, yet supporting a low-cost, compact design with easy deployment under the bed frame.
The importance of sleep for human life is enormous. It affects physical, mental, and psychological health. Therefore, it is vital to recognise sleep disorders in a timely manner in order to be able to initiate therapy. There are two methods for measuring sleep-related parameters - objective and subjective. Whether the substitution of a subjective method for an objective one is possible is investigated in this paper. Such replacement may bring several advantages, including increased comfort for the user. To answer this research question, a study was conducted in which 75 overnight recordings were evaluated. The primary purpose of this study was to compare both ways of measurement for total sleep time and sleep efficiency, which are essential parameters for, e.g., insomnia diagnosis and treatment. The evaluation results demonstrated that, on average, there are 32 minutes of difference between the two measurement methods when total sleep time is analysed. In contrast, on average, both measurement methods differ by 7.5% for sleep efficiency measurement. It should also be noted that people typically overestimate total sleep time and efficiency with the subjective method, where the perceived values are measured.
This workshop addressed scientific research and development to acquire physiological signals, process signals, and extract relevant data for further analysis. There are very different domains of application, for example. Tiredness and drowsiness are responsible for a significant percentage of road accidents. There are different approaches to monitoring driver drowsiness, ranging from the driver’s steering behavior to in-depth analysis of the driver, e.g., eye tracking, blinking, yawning, or Electrocardiogram (ECG). One of the leading causes of road accidents in Egypt is trucks, buses, cars, motorcycles, and pedestrians, all sharing the same infrastructure. The result is that there are more than 12,000 fatalities in road accidents every year. Thousands are injured, and some suffer long-term disabilities. A similar effect can be observed in Germany for all types of vehicles. According to the Federal Statistical Office, a high percentage of accidents involving personal injury are directly or indirectly caused by drowsiness.
A different application domain is sleep monitoring: Healthy and sound sleep is a prerequisite for a rested mind and body. Both form the basis for physical and mental health. Healthy sleep is counteracted by sleep disorders, the medically diagnosed frequency of which increases sharply from the age of 40. Increasing acceptance can be promoted by monitoring vital signs during sleep over long periods through the exclusive use of noninvasive technologies. In the case of objective measurement, the vital signs are measured to calculate the sleep phases or sleep efficiency and, after applying the appropriate algorithms, to record the sleep quality. About a quarter of all Germans have the feeling of sleeping poorly. The disruptive factors include problems falling asleep or the subjective feeling that sleep is not restful. About half of those subjectively affected have consulted a doctor. Older people and people living alone are particularly affected. There is no doubt that sleep abnormalities can lead to poor performance throughout the day, physical/somatic illnesses, psychological problems, or even premature death. Prevention, early detection, and therapy support are relevant factors impacting the personal quality of life.
The presented approaches have different application domains but share standard methodologies and technologies. Cross-domain thinking and application are essential to successful data acquisition and processing, either with traditional or cutting-edge approaches.
Das Motto in diesem Jahr lautet: "Zukunft mIT gestalten". Die Beiträge sind ein Spiegelbild der menschenzentrierten Rolle der Informatik in der heutigen Welt. Sie zeigen u. a. Forschungen in Künstlicher Intelligenz, Mensch-Maschine-Interkation und Mixed-Reality mit Anwendungen in der Medizin, der Wirtschaft und der Gesellschaft. Ein besonderer Höhepunkt der Konferenz ist der abschließende Gastvortrag von Frau Prof. Dr. Claudia Müller-Birn zum Thema "Human-Centered Data Science".
Multi-versioning and MVCC are the foundations of many modern DBMSs. Under mixed workloads and large datasets, the creation of the transactional snapshot can become very expensive, as long-running analytical transactions may request old versions, residing on cold storage, for reasons of transactional consistency. Furthermore, analytical queries operate on cold data, stored on slow persistent storage. Due to the poor data locality, snapshot creation may cause massive data transfers and thus lower performance. Given the current trend towards computational storage and near-data processing, it has become viable to perform such operations in-storage to reduce data transfers and improve scalability. neoDBMS is a DBMS designed for near-data processing and computational storage. In this paper, we demonstrate how neoDBMS performs snapshot computation in-situ. We showcase different interactive scenarios, where neoDBMS outperforms PostgreSQL 12 by up to 5×.
In times of climate change and growing urbanization, the way food is produced and consumed also changes. Meanwhile, digitization is transforming farming practices, which also applies to the domestic growing of crops. More and more so-called smart home farms (SHF) are finding their way into private households. This paper conceptualizes the unique nature of enabled smart services and their underlying technology. Following an inductive interpretive approach, this study explores the antecedents of smart home farming practices. Our sample consists of eleven actual smart home farmers. We found six constructs to be of salient importance: expected outcomes related to harvesting, positive feelings, and sustainability; a combination of one's affinity for green and novel technologies; and the smartness and visibility of the enabled services. In the outlook, we present some preliminary thoughts for testing our qualitative findings.
For a long time, most discrete accelerators have been attached to host systems using various generations of the PCI Express interface. However, with its lack of support for coherency between accelerator and host caches, fine-grained interactions require frequent cache-flushes, or even the use of inefficient uncached memory regions. The Cache Coherent Interconnect for Accelerators (CCIX) was the first multi-vendor standard for enabling cache-coherent host-accelerator attachments, and already is indicative of the capabilities of upcoming standards such as Compute Express Link (CXL). In our work, we compare and contrast the use of CCIX with PCIe when interfacing an ARM-based host with two generations of CCIX-enabled FPGAs. We provide both low-level throughput and latency measurements for accesses and address translation, as well as examine an application-level use-case of using CCIX for fine-grained synchronization in an FPGA-accelerated database system. We can show that especially smaller reads from the FPGA to the host can benefit from CCIX by having roughly 33% shorter latency than PCIe. Small writes to the host have a latency roughly 32% higher than PCIe, though, since they carry a higher coherency overhead. For the database use-case, the use of CCIX allowed to maintain a constant synchronization latency even with heavy host-FPGA parallelism.
Database management systems and K/V-Stores operate on updatable datasets – massively exceeding the size of available main memory. Tree-based K/V storage management structures became particularly popular in storage engines. B+ -Trees [1, 4] allow constant search performance, however write-heavy workloads yield in inefficient write patterns to secondary storage devices and poor performance characteristics. LSM-Trees [16, 23] overcome this issue by horizontal partitioning fractions of data – small enough to fully reside in main memory, but require frequent maintenance to sustain search performance.
Firstly, we propose Multi-Version Partitioned BTrees (MV-PBT) as sole storage and index management structure in key-sorted storage engines like K/V-Stores. Secondly, we compare MV-PBT against LSM-Trees. The logical horizontal partitioning in MV-PBT allows leveraging recent advances in modern B+ -Tree techniques in a small transparent and memory resident portion of the structure. Structural properties sustain steady read performance, yielding efficient write patterns and reducing write amplification.
We integrated MV-PBT in the WiredTiger [15] KV storage engine. MV-PBT offers an up to 2× increased steady throughput in comparison to LSM-Trees and several orders of magnitude in comparison to B+ -Trees in a YCSB [5] workload.
Even though near-data processing (NDP) can provably reduce data transfers and increase performance, current NDP is solely utilized in read-only settings. Slow or tedious to implement synchronization and invalidation mechanisms between host and smart storage make NDP support for data-intensive update operations difficult. In this paper, we introduce a low-latency cache-coherent shared lock table for update NDP settings in disaggregated memory environments. It utilizes the novel CCIX interconnect technology and is integrated in neoDBMS, a near-data processing DBMS for smart storage. Our evaluation indicates end-to-end lock latencies of ∼80-100ns and robust performance under contention.
Continuous monitoring of individual vital parameters can provide information for the assessment of one’s health and indications of medical problems in the context of personalized medicine. Correlations between parameters and health issues are to be evaluated. As one project in this topic area, a telemedicine platform is implemented to gather data of outpatients via wearables and accumulate them for physicians and researchers to review. This work extracts requirements, draws use case scenarios, and shows the current system architecture consisting of a patient application, a physician application with a web server, and a backend server application. In further work, the prototype will assist to develop a vendor-free and open monitoring solution. A conclusion on functionality and usability will be evaluated in an imminent first study.
Blockchain is a technology for the secure processing and verification of data transactions based on a distributed peer-to-peer network that uses cryptographic processes, consensus algorithms, and backward-linked blocks to make transactions virtually immutable. Within supply chain management, blockchain technology offer potentials in increasing supply chain transparency, visibility, automation, and efficiency. However, its complexity requires future employees to have comprehensive knowledge regarding the functionality of blockchain-based applications in order to be able to apply their benefits to scenarios in supply chain and production. Learning factories represent a suitable environment allowing learners to experience new technologies and to apply them to virtual and physical processes throughout value chains. This paper presents a concept to practically transfer knowledge about the technical functionality of blockchain technology to future engineers and software developers working within supply chains and production operations to sensitize them regarding the advantages of decentralized applications. First, the concept proposes methods to playfully convey immutable backward-linked blocks and the embedment of blockchain smart contracts. Subsequently, the students use this knowledge to develop blockchain-based application scenarios by means of an exemplary product in a learning factory environment. Finally, the developed solutions are implemented with the help of a prototypical decentralized application, which enables a holistic mapping of supply chain events.
We present a multitask network that supports various deep neural network based pedestrian detection functions. Besides 2D and 3D human pose, it also supports body and head orientation estimation based on full body bounding box input. This eliminates the need for explicit face recognition. We show that the performance of 3D human pose estimation and orientation estimation is comparable to the state-of-the-art. Since very few data sets exist for 3D human pose and in particular body and head orientation estimation based on full body data, we further show the benefit of particular simulation data to train the network. The network architecture is relatively simple, yet powerful, and easily adaptable for further research and applications.
Current data-intensive systems suffer from scalability as they transfer massive amounts of data to the host DBMS to process it there. Novel near-data processing (NDP) DBMS architectures and smart storage can provably reduce the impact of raw data movement. However, transferring the result-set of an NDP operation may increase the data movement, and thus, the performance overhead. In this paper, we introduce a set of in-situ NDP result-set management techniques, such as spilling, materialization, and reuse. Our evaluation indicates a performance improvement of 1.13 × to 400 ×.
Imagine a world in which the search for tomorrow's trends of (software) products is not subject to a long and laborious data search but is possible with a single mouse click. Through the use of artificial intelligence (AI), this reality is made possible and is to be further advanced through research. The study therefore aims to provide an initial overview of the young research field. Based on research, expert interviews, company and student surveys, current application possibilities of AI in the innovation process (defined as Smart Innovation), existing challenges that slow down the further development are discussed in more detail and future application possibilities are presented. Finally, a recommendation for action is made for business, politics and science to help overcome the current obstacles together and thus drive the future of Smart Innovation.
Imagine a world in which the search for tomorrow's trends is not subject to a long and laborious data search but is possible with a single mouse click. Through the use of artificial intelligence (AI), this reality is made possible and is to be further advanced through research. The study therefore aims to provide an initial overview of the young research field. Based on research, expert interviews, company and student surveys, current application possibilities of AI in the innovation process (defined as Smart Innovation), existing challenges that slow down the further development are discussed in more detail and future application possibilities are presented. Finally, a recommendation for action is made for business, politics and science to help overcome the current obstacles together and thus drive the future of Smart Innovation.
Die Informatics Inside ist seit über 13 Jahren ein fester Bestandteil des akademischen Jahres an der Fakultät für Informatik der Hochschule Reutlingen. Die Konferenz wird von Studierenden des Masterstudiengangs Human-Centered Computing selbstständig organisiert und bildet einen wichtigen Teil der wissenschaftlichen Ausbildung. Die Studierenden haben ihre Themen selbst gewählt und nicht selten sind es Fragen, die sie bereits durch das ganze Studium begleiten. Sie bereiten diese im Format einer wissenschaftlichen Ausarbeitung auf, wobei Inhalt, Vollständigkeit und Nachvollziehbarkeit entscheidende Faktoren sind. Die Ergebnisse dieser vertieften Auseinandersetzung mit relevanten Anwendungsthemen der Informatik können Sie in diesem Tagungsband nachlesen. Die Anwendungsdomänen reichen von der Medizin über Wirtschaft bis zu den Medien. Dabei werden aktuelle Fragestellungen des menschzentrierten Einsatzes von künstlicher Intelligenz, Softwaretechnik, Datenanalyse und Kommunikation sowie der digitalen Transformation behandelt. Es wird deutlich, dass der Nutzen von IT-Lösungen für den Menschen im Mittelpunkt der Veranstaltung steht. Das Motto der Veranstaltung „IT´s Future“ ist Programm und macht die Relevanz der Informatik für alle Lebensbereiche sowie die zukünftige Innovations- und Wettbewerbsfähigkeit von Industrie und Forschung deutlich.
Deep learning-based EEG detection of mental alertness states from drivers under ethical aspects
(2021)
One of the most critical factors for a successful road trip is a high degree of alertness while driving. Even a split second of inattention or sleepiness in a crucial moment, will make the difference between life and death. Several prestigious car manufacturers are currently pursuing the aim of automated drowsiness identification to resolve this problem. The path between neuro-scientific research in connection with artificial intelligence and the preservation of the dignity of human individual’s and its inviolability, is very narrow. The key contribution of this work is a system of data analysis for EEGs during a driving session, which draws on previous studies analyzing heart rate (ECG), brain waves (EEG), and eye function (EOG). The gathered data is hereby treated as sensitive as possible, taking ethical regulations into consideration. Obtaining evaluable signs of evolving exhaustion includes techniques that obtain sleeping stage frequencies, problematic are hereby the correlated interference’s in the signal. This research focuses on a processing chain for EEG band splitting that involves band-pass filtering, principal component analysis (PCA), independent component analysis (ICA) with automatic artefact severance, and fast fourier transformation (FFT). The classification is based on a step-by-step adaptive deep learning analysis that detects theta rhythms as a drowsiness predictor in the pre-processed data. It was possible to obtain an offline detection rate of 89% and an online detection rate of 73%. The method is linked to the simulated driving scenario for which it was developed. This leaves space for more optimization on laboratory methods and data collection during wakefulness-dependent operations.
Seit über 12 Jahren findet nun die Informatics Inside als Informatikkonferenz an der Hochschule Reutlingen statt, in diesem Jahr zum zweiten Mal in einem halbjährigen Rhythmus, d.h. auch im Herbst. Diese Wissenschaftliche Konferenz des Masterstudiengangs Human-Centered Computing wird von den Studierenden selbst organisiert und durchgeführt. Sie erhalten während ihres Masterstudiums die Gelegenheit sich in einem selbstgewählten Fachthema zu vertiefen. Dies kann an der Hochschule, in einem Unternehmen, einem Forschungsinstitut oder im Ausland durchgeführt werden. Gerade diese flexible Ausgestaltung des Moduls „Wissenschaftliche Vertiefung“ führt zu einem sehr breiten Themenspektrum, das von den Studierenden bearbeitet wird. Neben der eigentlichen fachlichen Vertiefung spielt auch die Präsentation und Verteidigung von wissenschaftlichen Ergebnissen eine wichtige Rolle und dies weit über das Studium hinaus. Ein gewähltes Fachgebiet so allgemeinverständlich aufzubereiten und zu vermitteln, dass es auch für Nicht-Spezialisten verständlich wird, stellt immer wieder eine besondere Herausforderung dar. Dieser Herausforderung stellen sich die Studierenden im Rahmen der Herbstkonferenz zur Wissenschaftlichen Vertiefung am 24. November 2021. Bereits zum vierten Mal wird die Veranstaltung in einem online-Modus stattfinden, einschließlich eines virtuellen Begleitprogramms.
Das Themenspektrum der diesjährigen Herbstkonferenz ist wieder sehr vielfältig und breit gefächert. So erwarten Sie u.a. Beiträge aus dem Gesundheitssektor, dem Maschinellen Lernen, der KI und VR sowie dem Marketing und E-Learning. Allen gemein ist ein sehr starker Bezug zu innovativen Informatikansätzen, was sich auch in dem Wortspiel und Motto „RockIT Science“ der Konferenz widerspiegelt. Die Informatik durchdringt fast alle beruflichen und privaten Anwendungsbereiche und hat zunehmend größeren Einfluss auf unser tägliches Leben. Dies kann einerseits Besorgnis und andererseits Begeisterung auslösen. Gerade letzteres wollen die Studierenden mit Ihren Beiträgen erreichen und es auch mal im Informatiksektor „rocken“ lassen.
Prior to the introduction of AI-based forecast models in the procurement department of an industrial retail company, we assessed the digital skills of the procurement employees and surveyed their attitudes toward a new digital technology. The aim of the survey was to ascertain important contextual factors which are likely to influence the acceptance and the successful use of the new forecast tool. What we find is that the digital skills of the employees show an intermediate level and that their attitudes toward key aspects of new digital technologies are largely positive. Thus, the conditions for high acceptance and the successful use of the models are good, as evidenced by the high intention of the procurement staff to use the models. In line with previous research, we find that the perceived usefulness of a new technology and the perceived ease of use are significant drivers of the willingness to use the new forecast tool.
Forecasting demand is challenging. Various products exhibit different demand patterns. While demand may be constant and regular for one product, it may be sporadic for another, as well as when demand occurs, it may fluctuate significantly. Forecasting errors are costly and result in obsolete inventory or unsatisfied demand. Methods from statistics, machine learning, and deep learning have been used to predict such demand patterns. Nevertheless, it is not clear for what demand pattern, which algorithm would achieve the best forecast. Therefore, even today a large number of models are used to forecast on a test period. The model with the best result on the test period is used for the actual forecast. This approach is computationally and time intensive and, in most cases, uneconomical. In our paper we show the possibility to use a machine learning classification algorithm, which predicts the best possible model based on the characteristics of a time series. The approach was developed and evaluated on a dataset from a B2B-technical-retailer. The machine learning classification algorithm achieves a mean ROC-AUC of 89%, which emphasizes the skill of the model.
Forecasting demand is challenging. Various products exhibit different demand patterns. While demand may be constant and regular for one product, it may be sporadic for another, as well as when demand occurs, it may fluctuate significantly. Forecasting errors are costly and result in obsolete inventory or unsatisfied demand. Methods from statistics, machine learning, and deep learning have been used to predict such demand patterns. Nevertheless, it is not clear for what demand pattern, which algorithm would achieve the best forecast. Therefore, even today a large number of models are used to forecast on a test period. The model with the best result on the test period is used for the actual forecast. This approach is computationally and time intensive and, in most cases, uneconomical. In our paper we show the possibility to use a machine learning classification algorithm, which predicts the best possible model based on the characteristics of a time series. The approach was developed and evaluated on a dataset from a B2B-technical-retailer. The machine learning classification algorithm achieves a mean ROC-AUC of 89%, which emphasizes the skill of the model.
So-called cloud-based management information systems are a fairly new phenomenon in management accounting in recent years. Quite a few companies (and especially their business managers and management accountants) do not always work via the cloud, but with hybrid solutions or on-premise solutions of ERP software such as SAP or Oracle, but often still with "manual" solutions such as Microsoft Excel.
In various German cities free-floating e-scooter sharing is an upcoming trend in e-mobility. Trends such as climate change, urbanization, demographic change, amongst others are arising and forces the society to develop new mobility solutions. Contrasting the more scientifically explored car sharing, the usage patterns and behaviors of e-scooter sharing customers still need to be analyzed. This presumably enables a better addressing of customers as well as adaptions of the business model to increase scooter utilization and therefore the profit of the e-scooter providers. The customer journey is digitally traceable from registration to scooter reservation and the ride itself. These data enable to identifies customer needs and motivations. We analyzed a dataset from 2017 to 2019 of an e-scooter sharing provider operating in a big German city. Based on the datasets we propose a customer clustering that identifies three different customer segments, enabling to draw multiple conclusions for the business development and improving the problem-solution fit of the e-scooter sharing model.
Forecasting intermittent and lumpy demand is challenging. Demand occurs only sporadically and, when it does, it can vary considerably. Forecast errors are costly, resulting in obsolescent stock or unmet demand. Methods from statistics, machine learning and deep learning have been used to predict such demand patterns. Traditional accuracy metrics are often employed to evaluate the forecasts, however these come with major drawbacks such as not taking horizontal and vertical shifts over the forecasting horizon into account, or indeed stock-keeping or opportunity costs. This results in a disadvantageous selection of methods in the context of intermittent and lumpy demand forecasts. In our study, we compare methods from statistics, machine learning and deep learning by applying a novel metric called Stock-keeping-oriented Prediction Error Costs (SPEC), which overcomes the drawbacks associated with traditional metrics. Taking the SPEC metric into account, the Croston algorithm achieves the best result, just ahead of a Long Short-Term Memory Neural Network.
Digitalization increases the pressure for companies to innovate. While current research on digital transformation mostly focuses on technological and management aspects, less attention has been paid to organizational culture and its influence on digital innovations. The purpose of this paper is to identify the characteristics of organizational culture that foster digital innovations. Based on a systematic literature review on three scholarly databases, we initially found 778 articles that were then narrowed down to a total number of 23 relevant articles through a methodical approach. After analyzing these articles, we determine nine characteristics of organizational culture that foster digital innovations: corporate entrepreneurship, digital awareness and necessity of innovations, digital skills and resources, ecosystem orientation, employee participation, agility and organizational structures, error culture and risk-taking, internal knowledge sharing and collaboration, customer and market orientation as well as open-mindedness and willingness to learn.
By 2019, Germany-based Kärcher, “the world’s leading provider of cleaning technology,” had turned its professional cleaning devices into IoT products. The data generated by these IoT-connected cleaning devices formed a key ingredient in the company’s ongoing strategic shift in its B2B business: Kärcher was transforming from a seller of cleaning devices to a provider of consulting services in order to help professional cleaning companies improve their cleaning processes. Based on interviews with seven IT- and non-IT executives, the case illustrates how the company learned to generate value from IoT products. And it demonstrates how a family-owned company transformed its organization in order to be able to more effectively develop and provide IoT products, while adding roles, developing technology platforms, and changing organizational structures and ways of working.
Intermittent time series forecasting is a challenging task which still needs particular attention of researchers. The more unregularly events occur, the more difficult is it to predict them. With Croston’s approach in 1972 (1.Nr. 3:289–303), intermittence and demand of a time series were investigated the first time separately. He proposes an exponential smoothing in his attempt to generate a forecast which corresponds to the demand per period in average. Although this algorithm produces good results in the field of stock control, it does not capture the typical characteristics of intermittent time series within the final prediction. In this paper, we investigate a time series’ intermittence and demand individually, forecast the upcoming demand value and inter-demand interval length using recent machine learning algorithms, such as long-short-term-memories and light-gradient-boosting machines, and reassemble both information to generate a prediction which preserves the characteristics of an intermittent time series. We compare the results against Croston’s approach, as well as recent forecast procedures where no split is performed.
Context: The software-intensive business is characterized by increasing market dynamics, rapid technological changes, and fast-changing customer behaviors. Organizations face the challenge of moving away from traditional roadmap formats to an outcome-oriented approach that focuses on delivering value to the customer and the business. An important starting point and a prerequisite for creating such outcome-oriented roadmaps is the development of a product vision to which internal and external stakeholders can be aligned. However, the process of creating a product vision is little researched and understood.
Objective: The goal of this paper is to identify lessons-learned from product vision workshops, which were conducted to develop outcome-oriented product roadmaps.
Method: We conducted a multiple-case study consisting of two different product vision workshops in two different corporate contexts.
Results: Our results show that conducting product vision workshops helps to create a common understanding among all stakeholders about the future direction of the products. In addition, we identified key organizational aspects that contribute to the success of product vision workshops, including the participation of employees from functionally different departments.
Context: Many companies are facing an increasingly dynamic and uncertain market environment, making traditional product roadmapping practices no longer sufficiently applicable. As a result, many companies need to adapt their product roadmapping practices for continuing to operate successfully in today’s dynamic market environment. However, transforming product roadmapping practices is a difficult process for organizations. Existing literature offers little help on how to accomplish such a process.
Objective: The objective of this paper is to present a product roadmap transformation approach for organizations to help them identify appropriate improvement actions for their roadmapping practices using an analysis of their current practices.
Method: Based on an existing assessment procedure for evaluating product roadmapping practices, the first version of a product roadmap transformation approach was developed in workshops with company experts. The approach was then given to eleven practitioners and their perceptions of the approach were gathered through interviews.
Results: The result of the study is a transformation approach consisting of a process describing what steps are necessary to adapt the currently applied product roadmapping practice to a dynamic and uncertain market environment. It also includes recommendations on how to select areas for improvement and two empirically based mapping tables. The interviews with the practitioners revealed that the product roadmap transformation approach was perceived as comprehensible, useful, and applicable. Nevertheless, we identified potential for improvements, such as a clearer presentation of some processes and the need for more improvement options in the mapping tables. In addition, minor usability issues were identified.
Product roadmaps in the new mobility domain: state of the practice and industrial experiences
(2021)
Context: The New Mobility industry is a young market that includes high market dynamics and is therefore associated with a high degree of uncertainty. Traditional product roadmapping approaches such a detailed planning of features over a long-time horizon typically fail in such environments. For this reason, companies that are active in the field of New Mobility are faced with the challenge of keeping their product roadmaps reliable for stakeholders while at the same time being able to react flexibly to changing market requirements.
Objective: The goal of this paper is to identify the state of practice regarding product roadmapping of New Mobility companies. In addition, the related challenges within the product roadmapping process as well as the success factors to overcome these challenges will be highlighted.
Method: We conducted semi-structured expert interviews with 8 experts (7 German company and one Finnish company) from the field of New Mobility and performed a content analysis.
Results: Overall the results of the study showed that the participating companies are aware of the requirements that the New Mobility sector entails. Therefore, they exhibit a high level of maturity in terms of product roadmapping. Nevertheless, some aspects were revealed that pose specific challenges for the participating companies. One major challenge, for example, is that New Mobility in terms of public clients is often a tender business with non-negotiable product requirements. Thus, the product roadmap can be significantly influenced from the outside. As factors for a successful product roadmapping mainly soft factors such as trust between all people involved in the product development process and transparency throughout the entire roadmapping process were mentioned.