TY - JOUR A1 - Myburgh-Jacobsz, Catharina Elizabeth A1 - Botha-Le Roux, Shani A1 - Kotliar, Konstantin A1 - Wentzel, Annemarie A1 - Jacobs, Adriaan A1 - De Boever, Patrick A1 - Goswami, Nandu A1 - Strijdom, Hans A1 - Smith, Wayne T1 - Retinal vessel functional responses in South Africans living with and without HIV: the EndoAfrica-NWU study JF - Microcirculation Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/micc.12878 SN - 1073-9688 (Print) SN - 1549-8719 (Online) IS - Early View PB - Wiley CY - Malden, MA ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Freyer, Nils A1 - Kempt, Hendrik A1 - Klöser, Lars T1 - Easy-read and large language models: on the ethical dimensions of LLM-based text simplification JF - Ethics and Information Technology N2 - The production of easy-read and plain language is a challenging task, requiring well-educated experts to write context-dependent simplifications of texts. Therefore, the domain of easy-read and plain language is currently restricted to the bare minimum of necessary information. Thus, even though there is a tendency to broaden the domain of easy-read and plain language, the inaccessibility of a significant amount of textual information excludes the target audience from partaking or entertainment and restricts their ability to live life autonomously. Large language models can solve a vast variety of natural language tasks, including the simplification of standard language texts to easy-read or plain language. Moreover, with the rise of generative models like GPT, easy-read and plain language may be applicable to all kinds of natural language texts, making formerly inaccessible information accessible to marginalized groups like, a.o., non-native speakers, and people with mental disabilities. In this paper, we argue for the feasibility of text simplification and generation in that context, outline the ethical dimensions, and discuss the implications for researchers in the field of ethics and computer science. KW - Large language models KW - Easy read KW - AI ethics KW - Natural language processing KW - Accessibility Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10676-024-09792-4 SN - 1388-1957 (Print) SN - 1572-8439 (Online) VL - 26 PB - Springer CY - Dortrecht ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Akimbekov, Nuraly A1 - Digel, Ilya A1 - Zhubanova, Azhar A1 - Tastambek, Kuanysh T. A1 - Tepecik, Atakan A1 - Sherelkhan, Dinara T1 - Biotechnological potentials of surfactants in coal utilization: a review JF - Environmental Science and Pollution Research N2 - The quest for scientifically advanced and sustainable solutions is driven by growing environmental and economic issues associated with coal mining, processing, and utilization. Consequently, within the coal industry, there is a growing recognition of the potential of microbial applications in fostering innovative technologies. Microbial-based coal solubilization, coal beneficiation, and coal dust suppression are green alternatives to traditional thermochemical and leaching technologies and better meet the need for ecologically sound and economically viable choices. Surfactant-mediated approaches have emerged as powerful tools for modeling, simulation, and optimization of coal-microbial systems and continue to gain prominence in clean coal fuel production, particularly in microbiological co-processing, conversion, and beneficiation. Surfactants (surface-active agents) are amphiphilic compounds that can reduce surface tension and enhance the solubility of hydrophobic molecules. A wide range of surfactant properties can be achieved by either directly influencing microbial growth factors, stimulants, and substrates or indirectly serving as frothers, collectors, and modifiers in the processing and utilization of coal. This review highlights the significant biotechnological potential of surfactants by providing a thorough overview of their involvement in coal biodegradation, bioprocessing, and biobeneficiation, acknowledging their importance as crucial steps in coal consumption. KW - Coal KW - Surfactants KW - Microorganisms KW - Biosolubilization KW - Biobeneficiation Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-024-34892-5 SN - 1614-7499 VL - 31 SP - 55099 EP - 55118 PB - Springer CY - Berlin ER - TY - BOOK A1 - Heinrichs, Florian T1 - Algorithmen, Zufall, Unsicherheit – und Pizza! BT - Wie Mathematik uns hilft, alltägliche Entscheidungen zu treffen N2 - Dieses Buch lädt dazu ein, die Welt um uns herum aus einem neuen Blickwinkel zu betrachten und dabei die spannende Verbindung zwischen der Mathematik und unserem täglichen Leben zu entdecken – denn um die Technologien und Entwicklungen unserer modernen Gesellschaft zu verstehen, benötigen wir ein intuitives Verständnis grundlegender mathematischer Ideen. In diesem Buch geht es um diese Grundlagen, vor allem aber um ihre praktische Anwendung im Alltag: Gemeinsam begeben wir uns auf eine unterhaltsame Reise und entdecken dabei, wie Mathematik in vielfältiger Weise allgegenwärtig ist. Anschauliche Beispiele zeigen, wie wir täglich – oft unbewusst – mathematische Ideen nutzen und wie wir mit Hilfe von Mathematik bessere Entscheidungen treffen können. Nach einer Einführung in Algorithmen und Optimierungsprobleme, geht es im weiteren Verlauf um die Modellierung von Zufall und Unsicherheiten. Zum Ende des Buchs werden die Themen zusammengeführt und Algorithmen für Anwendungen besprochen, bei denen der Zufall eine entscheidende Rolle spielt. Y1 - 2024 SN - 978-3-662-69171-7 (Print) SN - 978-3-662-69172-4 (eBook) U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-69172-4 PB - Springer CY - Berlin ER - TY - INPR A1 - Bremm, Florian A1 - Blaneck, Patrick Gustav A1 - Bornheim, Tobias A1 - Grieger, Niklas A1 - Bialonski, Stephan T1 - Preprint: Detecting sexism in German online newspaper comments with open-source text embeddings BT - (Team GDA, GermEval2024 Shared Task 1: GerMS-Detect, Subtasks 1 and 2, Closed Track) T2 - arXiv N2 - Sexism in online media comments is a pervasive challenge that often manifests subtly, complicating moderation efforts as interpretations of what constitutes sexism can vary among individuals. We study monolingual and multilingual open-source text embeddings to reliably detect sexism and misogyny in Germanlanguage online comments from an Austrian newspaper. We observed classifiers trained on text embeddings to mimic closely the individual judgements of human annotators. Our method showed robust performance in the GermEval 2024 GerMS-Detect Subtask 1 challenge, achieving an average macro F1 score of 0.597 (4th place, as reported on Codabench). It also accurately predicted the distribution of human annotations in GerMS-Detect Subtask 2, with an average Jensen-Shannon distance of 0.301 (2nd place). The computational efficiency of our approach suggests potential for scalable applications across various languages and linguistic contexts. Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2403.08592 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ortner, Marion A1 - Hauser, Christine A1 - Schmaderer, Christoph A1 - Muggenthaler, Claudia A1 - Hapfelmeier, Alexander A1 - Sorg, Christian A1 - Diehl-Schmid, Janine A1 - Kurz, Alexander A1 - Förstl, Hans A1 - Ikenberg, Benno A1 - Kotliar, Konstantin A1 - Holger, Poppert A1 - Grimmer, Timo T1 - Decreased vascular pulsatility in Alzheimer’s disease dementia measured by transcranial color-coded duplex sonography JF - Neuropsychiatric disease and treatment N2 - Purpose: Impaired paravascular drainage of β-Amyloid (Aβ) has been proposed as a contributing cause for sporadic Alzheimer’s disease (AD), as decreased cerebral blood vessel pulsatility and subsequently reduced propulsion in this pathway could lead to the accumulation and deposition of Aβ in the brain. Therefore, we hypothesized that there is an increased impairment in pulsatility across AD spectrum. Patients and Methods: Using transcranial color-coded duplex sonography (TCCS) the resistance and pulsatility index (RI; PI) of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) in healthy controls (HC, n=14) and patients with AD dementia (ADD, n=12) were measured. In a second step, we extended the sample by adding patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) stratified by the presence (MCI-AD, n=8) or absence of biomarkers (MCI-nonAD, n=8) indicative for underlying AD pathology, and compared RI and PI across the groups. To control for atherosclerosis as a confounder, we measured the arteriolar-venular-ratio of retinal vessels. Results: Left and right RI (p=0.020; p=0.027) and left PI (p=0.034) differed between HC and ADD controlled for atherosclerosis with AUCs of 0.776, 0.763, and 0.718, respectively. The RI and PI of MCI-AD tended towards ADD, of MCI-nonAD towards HC, respectively. RIs and PIs were associated with disease severity (p=0.010, p=0.023). Conclusion: Our results strengthen the hypothesis that impaired pulsatility could cause impaired amyloid clearance from the brain and thereby might contribute to the development of AD. However, further studies considering other factors possibly influencing amyloid clearance as well as larger sample sizes are needed. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.2147/NDT.S225754 SN - 1178-2021 IS - 15 SP - 3487 EP - 3499 PB - Dove Medical Press CY - Albany, Auckland ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bandlitz, Stefan A1 - Nakhoul, Makram A1 - Kotliar, Konstantin T1 - Daily variations of corneal white-to-white diameter measured with different methods JF - Clinical and experimental optometry N2 - Purpose: A precise determination of the corneal diameter is essential for the diagnosis of various ocular diseases, cataract and refractive surgery as well as for the selection and fitting of contact lenses. The aim of this study was to investigate the agreement between two automatic and one manual method for corneal diameter determination and to evaluate possible diurnal variations in corneal diameter. Patients and Methods: Horizontal white-to-white corneal diameter of 20 volunteers was measured at three different fixed times of a day with three methods: Scheimpflug method (Pentacam HR, Oculus), placido based topography (Keratograph 5M, Oculus) and manual method using an image analysis software at a slitlamp (BQ900, Haag-Streit). Results: The two-factorial analysis of variance could not show a significant effect of the different instruments (p = 0.117), the different time points (p = 0.506) and the interaction between instrument and time point (p = 0.182). Very good repeatability (intraclass correlation coefficient ICC, quartile coefficient of dispersion QCD) was found for all three devices. However, manual slitlamp measurements showed a higher QCD than the automatic measurements with the Keratograph 5M and the Pentacam HR at all measurement times. Conclusion: The manual and automated methods used in the study to determine corneal diameter showed good agreement and repeatability. No significant diurnal variations of corneal diameter were observed during the period of time studied. Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.2147/OPTO.S360651 SN - 0816-4622 IS - 14 SP - 173 EP - 181 PB - Taylor & Francis CY - London ER - TY - THES A1 - Pettrak, Jürgen T1 - Nutzung nachwachsender Rohstoffe bei der Herstellung thermoplastischer Elastomere aus Folgeprodukten der Olefinmetathese N2 - Metathese von Ölsäure und Derivaten ist ein interessanter Weg für die Synthese bifunktioneller Verbindungen aus nachwachsenden Rohstoffen. Verwendet wurden Ru-Katalysatoren der zweiten Generation, welche eine hohe Toleranz gegenüber funktionellen Gruppen und Verunreinigungen aufweisen. Trotz des Einsatzes technischer Edukte waren Umsetzungen mit niedrigen Katalysatormengen (0.001 – 0.01 mol-%) möglich, mit Ausbeuten entsprechend der Literatur. Kreuzmetathesen ermöglichten variable Kettenlängen und Funktionalitäten der Monomere, die Produktgewinnung ist jedoch aufwändig. Selbstmetathese lieferte C18-bifunktionelle Verbindungen, welche einfach durch Destillation oder Kristallisation isoliert werden können. Neben der katalystischen Umsetzung wurde auch die Produktgewinnung untersucht und für ausgewählte Produkte auch im größeren Maßstab durchgeführt. Y1 - 2010 PB - Technische Universität München CY - München ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Riepl, Herbert Matthias A1 - Pettrak, Jürgen A1 - Faulstich, Martin A1 - Herrmann, Wolfgang Anton T1 - Self metathesis of fatty alcohols and amines to provide monomers for polyester and polyamide products JF - Macromolecular Symposia N2 - Self metathesis of oleochemicals offers a variety of bifunctional compounds, that can be used as monomer for polymer production. Many precursors are in huge scales available, like oleic acid ester (biodiesel), oleyl alcohol (tensides), oleyl amines (tensides, lubricants). We show several ways to produce and separate and purify C18-α,ω-bifunctional compounds, using Grubbs 2nd Generation catalysts, starting from technical grade educts. KW - fatty acid KW - metathesis KW - polyamide KW - polyester KW - renewable resources Y1 - 2010 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/masy.200900041 SN - 1521-3900 (eISSN) SN - 0258-0322 SN - 1022-1360 N1 - Special Issue: "Olefin Metathesis" VL - 293 IS - 1 SP - 39 EP - 42 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - BOOK A1 - Pettrak, Jürgen T1 - Nutzung nachwachsender Rohstoffe bei der Herstellung thermoplastischer Elastomere aus Folgeprodukten der Olefinmetathese Y1 - 2014 SN - 978-3-942742-35-1 N1 - Nachwachsende Rohstoffe in Forschung und Praxis ; Bd. 4 PB - Attenkofer CY - Straubing ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Großhauser, Christian A1 - Pettrak, Jürgen T1 - Die Rolle des Wasserstoffs in der Abwasserbehandlung JF - Wasser und Abfall N2 - Die Bereitstellung von nachhaltig erzeugtem Wasserstoff als Energieträger und Rohstoff ist eine wichtige Schlüsseltechnologie sowohl als Ersatz für fossile Energieträger, aber auch als Produkt im Zusammenhang mit Kreislaufprozessen. In der Abwasserbehandlung bestehen verschiedene Möglichkeiten Wasserstoff herzustellen. Mehrere Wege, mögliche Synergien, aber auch deren Nachteile werden vorgestellt. Y1 - 2023 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s35152-023-1444-4 SN - 1436-9095 SN - 2192-8754 (eISSN) IS - 7/8 PB - Springer Fachmedien CY - Wiesbaden ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Maurer, Florian A1 - Sejdija, Jonathan A1 - Sander, Volker T1 - Decentralized energy data storages through an Open Energy Database Server N2 - In the research domain of energy informatics, the importance of open datais rising rapidly. This can be seen as various new public datasets are created andpublished. Unfortunately, in many cases, the data is not available under a permissivelicense corresponding to the FAIR principles, often lacking accessibility or reusability.Furthermore, the source format often differs from the desired data format or does notmeet the demands to be queried in an efficient way. To solve this on a small scale atoolbox for ETL-processes is provided to create a local energy data server with openaccess data from different valuable sources in a structured format. So while the sourcesitself do not fully comply with the FAIR principles, the provided unique toolbox allows foran efficient processing of the data as if the FAIR principles would be met. The energydata server currently includes information of power systems, weather data, networkfrequency data, European energy and gas data for demand and generation and more.However, a solution to the core problem - missing alignment to the FAIR principles - isstill needed for the National Research Data Infrastructure. KW - Open Data KW - Database KW - Time-series Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10607895 N1 - 1st NFDI4Energy Conference (NFDI4Energy) , Hanover, Germany, 20-21 February 2024 ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Maurer, Florian A1 - Nitsch, Felix A1 - Kochems, Johannes A1 - Schimeczek, Christoph A1 - Sander, Volker A1 - Lehnhoff, Sebastian T1 - Know your tools - a comparison of two open agent-based energy market models T2 - 2024 20th International Conference on the European Energy Market (EEM) N2 - Due to the transition to renewable energies, electricity markets need to be made fit for purpose. To enable the comparison of different energy market designs, modeling tools covering market actors and their heterogeneous behavior are needed. Agent-based models are ideally suited for this task. Such models can be used to simulate and analyze changes to market design or market mechanisms and their impact on market dynamics. In this paper, we conduct an evaluation and comparison of two actively developed open-source energy market simulation models. The two models, namely AMIRIS and ASSUME, are both designed to simulate future energy markets using an agent-based approach. The assessment encompasses modelling features and techniques, model performance, as well as a comparison of model results, which can serve as a blueprint for future comparative studies of simulation models. The main comparison dataset includes data of Germany in 2019 and simulates the Day-Ahead market and participating actors as individual agents. Both models are comparable close to the benchmark dataset with a MAE between 5.6 and 6.4 €/MWh while also modeling the actual dispatch realistically. KW - Comparative simulation KW - Measurement KW - Analytical models KW - Renewable energy sources KW - Simulation KW - Instruments KW - Refining KW - Focusing KW - Agent-based modeling KW - Energy market KW - Open source KW - Energy dispatch Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/EEM60825.2024.10609021 N1 - 2024 20th International Conference on the European Energy Market (EEM), 10-12 June 2024, Istanbul, Turkiye PB - IEEE CY - New York, NY ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kohl, Philipp A1 - Krämer, Yoka A1 - Fohry, Claudia A1 - Kraft, Bodo ED - Fred, Ana ED - Hadjali, Allel ED - Gusikhin, Oleg ED - Sansone, Carlo T1 - Scoping review of active learning strategies and their evaluation environments for entity recognition tasks JF - Deep learning theory and applications N2 - We conducted a scoping review for active learning in the domain of natural language processing (NLP), which we summarize in accordance with the PRISMA-ScR guidelines as follows: Objective: Identify active learning strategies that were proposed for entity recognition and their evaluation environments (datasets, metrics, hardware, execution time). Design: We used Scopus and ACM as our search engines. We compared the results with two literature surveys to assess the search quality. We included peer-reviewed English publications introducing or comparing active learning strategies for entity recognition. Results: We analyzed 62 relevant papers and identified 106 active learning strategies. We grouped them into three categories: exploitation-based (60x), exploration-based (14x), and hybrid strategies (32x). We found that all studies used the F1-score as an evaluation metric. Information about hardware (6x) and execution time (13x) was only occasionally included. The 62 papers used 57 different datasets to evaluate their respective strategies. Most datasets contained newspaper articles or biomedical/medical data. Our analysis revealed that 26 out of 57 datasets are publicly accessible. Conclusion: Numerous active learning strategies have been identified, along with significant open questions that still need to be addressed. Researchers and practitioners face difficulties when making data-driven decisions about which active learning strategy to adopt. Conducting comprehensive empirical comparisons using the evaluation environment proposed in this study could help establish best practices in the domain. Y1 - 2024 SN - 978-3-031-66694-0 (online ISBN) SN - 978-3-031-66693-3 (print ISBN) U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-66694-0_6 SP - 84 EP - 106 PB - Springer CY - Cham ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mikucki, Jill Ann A1 - Schuler, C. G. A1 - Digel, Ilya A1 - Kowalski, Julia A1 - Tuttle, M. J. A1 - Chua, Michelle A1 - Davis, R. A1 - Purcell, Alicia A1 - Ghosh, D. A1 - Francke, G. A1 - Feldmann, Marco A1 - Espe, C. A1 - Heinen, Dirk A1 - Dachwald, Bernd A1 - Clemens, Joachim A1 - Lyons, W. B. A1 - Tulaczyk, S. T1 - Field-Based planetary protection operations for melt probes: validation of clean access into the blood falls, antarctica, englacial ecosystem JF - Astrobiology N2 - Subglacial environments on Earth offer important analogs to Ocean World targets in our solar system. These unique microbial ecosystems remain understudied due to the challenges of access through thick glacial ice (tens to hundreds of meters). Additionally, sub-ice collections must be conducted in a clean manner to ensure sample integrity for downstream microbiological and geochemical analyses. We describe the field-based cleaning of a melt probe that was used to collect brine samples from within a glacier conduit at Blood Falls, Antarctica, for geomicrobiological studies. We used a thermoelectric melting probe called the IceMole that was designed to be minimally invasive in that the logistical requirements in support of drilling operations were small and the probe could be cleaned, even in a remote field setting, so as to minimize potential contamination. In our study, the exterior bioburden on the IceMole was reduced to levels measured in most clean rooms, and below that of the ice surrounding our sampling target. Potential microbial contaminants were identified during the cleaning process; however, very few were detected in the final englacial sample collected with the IceMole and were present in extremely low abundances (∼0.063% of 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequences). This cleaning protocol can help minimize contamination when working in remote field locations, support microbiological sampling of terrestrial subglacial environments using melting probes, and help inform planetary protection challenges for Ocean World analog mission concepts. Y1 - 2023 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1089/ast.2021.0102 SN - 1557-8070 (online) SN - 153-1074 (print) VL - 23 IS - 11 SP - 1165 EP - 1178 PB - Liebert CY - New York, NY ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Akimbekov, Nuraly S. A1 - Digel, Ilya A1 - Tastambek, Kuanysh T. A1 - Kozhahmetova, Marzhan A1 - Sherelkhan, Dinara K. A1 - Tauanov, Zhandos T1 - Hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis in coal-bearing environments: Methane production, carbon sequestration, and hydrogen availability JF - International Journal of Hydrogen Energy N2 - Methane is a valuable energy source helping to mitigate the growing energy demand worldwide. However, as a potent greenhouse gas, it has also gained additional attention due to its environmental impacts. The biological production of methane is performed primarily hydrogenotrophically from H2 and CO2 by methanogenic archaea. Hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis also represents a great interest with respect to carbon re-cycling and H2 storage. The most significant carbon source, extremely rich in complex organic matter for microbial degradation and biogenic methane production, is coal. Although interest in enhanced microbial coalbed methane production is continuously increasing globally, limited knowledge exists regarding the exact origins of the coalbed methane and the associated microbial communities, including hydrogenotrophic methanogens. Here, we give an overview of hydrogenotrophic methanogens in coal beds and related environments in terms of their energy production mechanisms, unique metabolic pathways, and associated ecological functions. KW - Coal KW - Methanogenesis KW - Methane KW - Hydrogenotrophic methanogens KW - H2 Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhydene.2023.09.223 SN - 1879-3487 (online) SN - 0360-3199 (print) VL - 52 IS - Part D SP - 1264 EP - 1277 PB - Elsevier CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zhantlessova, Sirina A1 - Savitskaya, Irina A1 - Kistaubayeva, Aida A1 - Ignatova, Ludmila A1 - Talipova, Aizhan A1 - Pogrebnjak, Alexander A1 - Digel, Ilya T1 - Correction: Zhantlessova et al. advanced “Green” prebiotic composite of bacterial cellulose/pullulan based on synthetic biology-powered microbial coculture strategy. Polymers 2022, 14, 3224 JF - Polymers Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/polym16131802 SN - 2073-4360 N1 - This article belongs to the Special Issue Cellulose Based Composites VL - 16 IS - 13 PB - MDPI CY - Basel ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kleefeld, Andreas A1 - Pieronek, J. T1 - Elastic transmission eigenvalues and their computation via the method of fundamental solutions JF - Applicable Analysis N2 - A stabilized version of the fundamental solution method to catch ill-conditioning effects is investigated with focus on the computation of complex-valued elastic interior transmission eigenvalues in two dimensions for homogeneous and isotropic media. Its algorithm can be implemented very shortly and adopts to many similar partial differential equation-based eigenproblems as long as the underlying fundamental solution function can be easily generated. We develop a corroborative approximation analysis which also implicates new basic results for transmission eigenfunctions and present some numerical examples which together prove successful feasibility of our eigenvalue recovery approach. KW - elastic scattering KW - method of fundamental solutions KW - Interior transmission eigenvalues Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/00036811.2020.1721473 SN - 1563-504X VL - 100 IS - 16 SP - 3445 EP - 3462 PB - Taylore & Francis CY - London ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Abele, Daniel A1 - Kleefeld, Andreas ED - Constanda, Christian T1 - New Numerical Results for the Optimization of Neumann Eigenvalues T2 - Computational and Analytic Methods in Science and Engineering N2 - We present new numerical results for shape optimization problems of interior Neumann eigenvalues. This field is not well understood from a theoretical standpoint. The existence of shape maximizers is not proven beyond the first two eigenvalues, so we study the problem numerically. We describe a method to compute the eigenvalues for a given shape that combines the boundary element method with an algorithm for nonlinear eigenvalues. As numerical optimization requires many such evaluations, we put a focus on the efficiency of the method and the implemented routine. The method is well suited for parallelization. Using the resulting fast routines and a specialized parametrization of the shapes, we found improved maxima for several eigenvalues. Y1 - 2020 SN - 978-3-030-48185-8 (Print) SN - 978-3-030-48186-5 (Online) U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-48186-5_1 SP - 1 EP - 20 PB - Birkhäuser CY - Cham ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Pieronek, Lukas A1 - Kleefeld, Andreas ED - Constanda, Christian ED - Harris, Paul T1 - The Method of Fundamental Solutions for Computing Interior Transmission Eigenvalues of Inhomogeneous Media T2 - Integral Methods in Science and Engineering: Analytic Treatment and Numerical Approximations N2 - The method of fundamental solutions is applied to the approximate computation of interior transmission eigenvalues for a special class of inhomogeneous media in two dimensions. We give a short approximation analysis accompanied with numerical results that clearly prove practical convenience of our alternative approach. Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-3-030-16077-7 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-16077-7_28 SP - 353 EP - 365 PB - Birkhäuser CY - Cham ER -