Informatik
Refine
Year of publication
- 2022 (50) (remove)
Document Type
- Conference proceeding (50) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (50)
Institute
- Informatik (50)
Publisher
- Springer (14)
- Hochschule Reutlingen (10)
- IEEE (5)
- University of Hawai'i at Manoa (3)
- Association for Computing Machinery (2)
- Association for Information Systems (2)
- Academic Conferences International Limited (1)
- Association for Computing Machinery ACM (1)
- EuroMed Press (1)
- Gesellschaft für Informatik e.V (1)
- IADIS (1)
- IARIA (1)
- IOP Publishing (1)
- OpenProceedings (1)
- SISSA (1)
- SPIE. The International Society for Optical Engineering (1)
- University of Hawaii at Manoa (1)
- University of Zagreb Faculty of Organization and Informatics (1)
Motivation: Aim of this project is the automatic classification of total hip endoprosthesis (THEP) components in 2D Xray images. Revision surgeries of total hip arthroplasty (THA) are common procedures in orthopedics and trauma surgery. Currently, around 400.000 procedures per year are performed in the United States (US) alone. To achieve the best possible result, preoperative planning is crucial. Especially if parts of the current THEP system are to be retained.
Methods: First, a ground truth based on 76 X-ray images was created: We used an image processing pipeline consisting of a segmentation step performed by a convolutional neural network and a classification step performed by a support vector machine (SVM). In total, 11 classes (5 pans and 6 shafts) shall be classified.
Results: The ground truth generated was of good quality even though the initial segmentation was performed by technicians. The best segmentation results were achieved using a U-net architecture. For classification, SVM architectures performed much better than additional neural networks.
Conclusions: The overall image processing pipeline performed well, but the ground truth needs to be extended to include a broader variability of implant types and more examples per training class.
Recognition of sleep and wake states is one of the relevant parts of sleep analysis. Performing this measurement in a contactless way increases comfort for the users. We present an approach evaluating only movement and respiratory signals to achieve recognition, which can be measured non-obtrusively. The algorithm is based on multinomial logistic regression and analyses features extracted out of mentioned above signals. These features were identified and developed after performing fundamental research on characteristics of vital signals during sleep. The achieved accuracy of 87% with the Cohen’s kappa of 0.40 demonstrates the appropriateness of a chosen method and encourages continuing research on this topic.
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.
Physicians in interventional radiology are exposed to high physical stress. To avoid negative long-term effects resulting from unergonomic working conditions, we demonstrated the feasibility of a system that gives feedback about unergonomic
situations arising during the intervention based on the Azure Kinect camera. The overall feasibility of the approach could be shown.
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 ×.
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.
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.
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.
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×.
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.