TY - CHAP A1 - Bitz, Andreas A1 - Alaydrus, M. A1 - Streckert, J. A1 - Hansen, V.W. T1 - Absorption rates inside human body due to radiated electro-magnetic fields of multi-band base station antennas. Boundary value problems with electrically large and high-resolution bodies T2 - 24th BEMS Annual Meeting, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada, 23 - 27 June 2002 Y1 - 2002 SP - 40 EP - 41 PB - Bioelectromagnetics Society CY - Frederick, MD ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schiffer, Stefan A1 - Ferrein, Alexander A1 - Lakemeyer, Gerhard T1 - Abstracting Away Low-Level Details in Service Robotics with Fuzzy Fluents JF - Model-Driven Knowledge Engineering for Improved Software Modularity in Robotics and Automation. Workshop at European Robotics Forum 2015 Vienna, Austria, March 11-13, 2015. Y1 - 2015 SP - 1 EP - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Frauenrath, Tobias A1 - Hezel, Fabian A1 - Renz, Wolfgang A1 - de Geyer d'Orth, Thibaut A1 - Dieringer, Matthias A1 - von Knobelsdorf-Brenkenhoff, Florian A1 - Prothmann, Marcel A1 - Schulz-Menger, Jeanette A1 - Niendorf, Thoralf T1 - Acoustic cardiac triggering: a practical solution for synchronization and gating of cardiovascular magnetic resonance at 7 Tesla JF - Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance N2 - Background To demonstrate the applicability of acoustic cardiac triggering (ACT) for imaging of the heart at ultrahigh magnetic fields (7.0 T) by comparing phonocardiogram, conventional vector electrocardiogram (ECG) and traditional pulse oximetry (POX) triggered 2D CINE acquisitions together with (i) a qualitative image quality analysis, (ii) an assessment of the left ventricular function parameter and (iii) an examination of trigger reliability and trigger detection variance derived from the signal waveforms. Results ECG was susceptible to severe distortions at 7.0 T. POX and ACT provided waveforms free of interferences from electromagnetic fields or from magneto-hydrodynamic effects. Frequent R-wave mis-registration occurred in ECG-triggered acquisitions with a failure rate of up to 30% resulting in cardiac motion induced artifacts. ACT and POX triggering produced images free of cardiac motion artefacts. ECG showed a severe jitter in the R-wave detection. POX also showed a trigger jitter of approximately Δt = 72 ms which is equivalent to two cardiac phases. ACT showed a jitter of approximately Δt = 5 ms only. ECG waveforms revealed a standard deviation for the cardiac trigger offset larger than that observed for ACT or POX waveforms. Image quality assessment showed that ACT substantially improved image quality as compared to ECG (image quality score at end-diastole: ECG = 1.7 ± 0.5, ACT = 2.4 ± 0.5, p = 0.04) while the comparison between ECG vs. POX gated acquisitions showed no significant differences in image quality (image quality score: ECG = 1.7 ± 0.5, POX = 2.0 ± 0.5, p = 0.34). Conclusions The applicability of acoustic triggering for cardiac CINE imaging at 7.0 T was demonstrated. ACT's trigger reliability and fidelity are superior to that of ECG and POX. ACT promises to be beneficial for cardiovascular magnetic resonance at ultra-high field strengths including 7.0 T. KW - Interval Time Series KW - Image Quality Score KW - Image Quality Assessment KW - Sound Pressure Level KW - Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Y1 - 2010 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429X-12-67 SN - 1532-429X VL - 12 IS - 1 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Frauenrath, Tobias A1 - Niendorf, Thoralf A1 - Kob, Malte T1 - Acoustic method for synchronization of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) JF - Acta Acustica N2 - Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of moving organs requires synchronization with physiological motion or flow, which dictate the viable window for data acquisition. To meet this challenge, this study proposes an acoustic gating device (ACG) that employs acquisition and processing of acoustic signals for synchronization while providing MRI compatibility, immunity to interferences with electro-magnetic and acoustic fields and suitability for MRI at high magnetic field strengths. The applicability and robustness of the acoustic gating approach is examined in a pilot study, where it substitutes conventional ECG-gating for cardiovascular MR. The merits and limitations of the ACG approach are discussed. Implications for MR imaging in the presence of physiological motion are considered including synchronization with other structure- or motion borne sounds. Y1 - 2008 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3813/AAA.918017 SN - 1861-9959 VL - 94 IS - 1 SP - 148 EP - 155 PB - Hirzel CY - Stuttgart ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ferrein, Alexander A1 - Dylla, Frank A1 - Lakemeyer, Gerhard T1 - Acting and Deliberating using Golog in Robotic Soccer - A Hybrid Architecture / Dylla, Frank ; Ferrein, Alexander ; Lakemeyer, Gerhard JF - Proc. 3rd International Cognitive Robotics Workshop (CogRob 2002) Y1 - 2002 SP - 1 EP - 7 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ferrein, Alexander A1 - Steinbauer, Gerald A1 - Vassos, Stavros T1 - Action-Based Imperative Programming with YAGI N2 - Many tasks for autonomous agents or robots are best described by a specification of the environment and a specification of the available actions the agent or robot can perform. Combining such a specification with the possibility to imperatively program a robot or agent is what we call the actionbased imperative programming. One of the most successful such approaches is Golog. In this paper, we draft a proposal for a new robot programming language YAGI, which is based on the action-based imperative programming paradigm. Our goal is to design a small, portable stand-alone YAGI interpreter. We combine the benefits of a principled domain specification with a clean, small and simple programming language, which does not exploit any side-effects from the implementation language. We discuss general requirements of action-based programming languages and outline YAGI, our action-based language approach which particularly aims at embeddability. Y1 - 2012 N1 - Cognitive Robotics AAAI Technical Report WS-12-06 SP - 24 EP - 31 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ritz, Thomas A1 - Stender, Michael ED - Weisbecker, Anette T1 - Ad-hoc Anwendungsintegration mit mobilen CRM-Systement JF - Electronic Business : Innovationen, Anwendungen und Technologien Y1 - 2004 SN - 3-8167-6621-8 SP - 92 EP - 97 PB - Fraunhofer-IRB-Verl. CY - Stuttgart ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Damm, Sebastian A1 - Ritz, Thomas A1 - Strauch, Jakob T1 - Adaption of archetype patterns for mobile cloud-based business apps T2 - 2011 IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications workshops (PerCom workshops 2011) : Seattle, Washington, USA, 21 - 25 March 2011 Y1 - 2011 SN - 978-1-61284-938-6 (Print) SN - 978-1-61284-936-2 (E-Book) U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/PERCOMW.2011.5766849 SP - 100 EP - 105 PB - IEEE Service Center CY - Piscataway, NJ ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Gebhardt, Andreas A1 - Ritz, Thomas A1 - Siekmann, Kirsten A1 - Wallenborn, Ramona ED - Demmer, Axel T1 - Additive manufacturing businesses in the process chain of individualized mass products T2 - DDMC 2014 : Proceedings of the Fraunhofer Direct Digital Manufacturing Conference Y1 - 2014 SN - 978-3-8396-9128-1 (E-Book) PB - Fraunhofer CY - Stuttgart ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Heuermann, Holger A1 - Rumiantsev, A. A1 - Schott, S. T1 - Advanced on-wafer multiport calibration methods for mono- and mixed-mode device characterization JF - On wafer characterization : 63rd ARFTG conference digest, spring 2004, 11 June 2004, Fort Worth, TX / Automatic RF Techniques Group. [Conference chair: John Cable. Publication chair: J. G. Burns] Y1 - 2004 SN - 0-7803-8371-0 N1 - Microwave Theory and Techniques Society. ; Automatic RF Techniques Group ; ARFTG conference ; (63 : ; 2004.06.11 : ; Fort Worth, Tex.) SP - 91 EP - 96 PB - IEEE Operations Center CY - Piscataway, NJ ER -