openHSU – Research Showcase

4709
Research outputs
848
People
140
Organizational Units
109
Projects
37
Conferences
17
Journals
Recent Additions
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Diversity in under-researched countries
    (Emerald, 2019-05-09)
    Klarsfeld, Alain
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    Knappert, Lena
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    Ngunjiri, Faith Wambura
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  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Systematic development of a virtual commissioning architecture for an automated production system
    (Elsevier, 2024-10-09) ; ; ;
    Shah, Nihar H.
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    This paper delves into Virtual Commissioning’s (VC) crucial role in accelerating aircraft manufacturing amid shorter product life cycles, employing the Software Platform Embedded Systems (SPES) methodology. Developing an adaptable VC architecture tailored for this industry, the study reveals SPES’s efficacy but highlights areas for improvement. Despite its strengths, limitations in decision support and clarity have been identified, recognizing the dynamic nature of industrial scenarios. Offering a valuable blueprint, the presented systematic development process aids researchers and practitioners in the evolving domain of VC and automated production systems. The developed architecture demonstrates the incorporation of complex industrial requirements. However, as the requirements are generic, such as scalability, the architecture is also applicable to other application scenarios.
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Optimizing virtual commissioning of a robotic system using process mining and footprints conformance checking
    In the aircraft manufacturing industry, the process plans created for tasks such as automated drilling and riveting are lengthy and require prior testing and validation using Virtual Commissioning (VC), which can be time-consuming. The introduction of a new process plan requires the complete plan to be tested and validated again, exacerbating the challenge of testing and validating several plans or sequences in advance using VC. This research paper proposes using process mining and footprints conformance checking to reduce VC time for robotic systems. By integrating these techniques, differences in process plans can be detected, and only the new sequences or changes from an old to a new process plan need to be tested, significantly reducing the time needed to perform VC. This research implies that the developed approach can improve the efficiency of VC and ultimately enhance the performance of automated manufacturing systems.
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Exploring conflict- and target-related movement of visual attention
    (Sage Publishing, 2014-06-01)
    Wendt, Mike
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    Garling, Marco
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    Intermixing trials of a visual search task with trials of a modified flanker task, the authors investigated whether the presentation of conflicting distractors at only one side (left or right) of a target stimulus triggers shifts of visual attention towards the contralateral side. Search time patterns provided evidence for lateral attention shifts only when participants performed the flanker task under an instruction assumed to widen the focus of attention, demonstrating that instruction-based control settings of an otherwise identical task can impact performance in an unrelated task. Contrasting conditions with response-related and response-unrelated distractors showed that shifting attention does not depend on response conflict and may be explained as stimulus-conflict-related withdrawal or target-related deployment of attention.
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Irrelevant stimulus processing when switching between tasks
    (Hogrefe, 2013-01)
    Wendt, Mike
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    Kiesel, Andrea
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    Mathew, Hanna
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    Frequent switching between two tasks afforded by the same stimuli is associated with between-task congruency effects, that is, relatively impaired performance when a stimulus affords different responses as compared to the same responses in both tasks. These congruency effects indicate some form of application of the stimulus-response (S-R) rules of the currently irrelevant task. Between-task congruency effects are usually enhanced on task switch trials compared with task repetition trials. Here we investigate whether this interaction reflects stronger proactive interference from the irrelevant task on switch trials or whether performance on switch trials is characterized by generally enhanced susceptibility to task-irrelevant information processing. To this end, we contrasted between-task congruency effects with interference exerted from flanker stimuli taken from the current task (Experiment 1) and from spatial-numerical association of response codes (SNARC; Experiment 2). In both experiments, between-task congruency effects were larger on switch trials than on repetition trials, whereas interference from the other source remained constant, thus demonstrating that switch trials are not characterized by generally increased distractibility.
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Mismatch Negativity (MMN) to successive deviants within one hierarchically structured auditory object
    (Elsevier Science, 2013-01)
    Jacobsen, Thomas Konstantin
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    Steinberg, Johanna
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    Truckenbrodt, Hubert
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    The Mismatch Negativity (MMN), a component of the event-related potential (ERP), is elicited by a deviant following a series of standard stimuli. The present study addressed the question whether two deviants occurring successively in one hierarchically organized auditory object would elicit separate MMN responses. An example of such an object is a VC syllable (vowel + consonant). In a passive oddball protocol, the syllables [ɔx] and [ɛʃ] were presented both as standards and deviants so that both phonemes, the vowel and the consonant, changed in the respective deviant. Two negative responses were found in the deviant-minus-standard difference waves. Due to the latencies these effects could not be interpreted as separate MMN responses to the phonemic changes. Instead, the first effect (108 ms) was taken as an N1 modulation whereas the second negativity (168 ms) was interpreted as an MMN mainly reflecting the change of the initial vowel. Furthermore, the present data were statistically compared with related results from Steinberg et al. (2010a, b) obtained partly from the same stimuli presented in oddball blocks with simple mono-phonemic deviances due to changing vowels. Higher MMN amplitudes were found for the syllable [ɛʃ] in the present data compared to those previous findings. Although this difference was only present for one of the stimulus syllables, it is discussed as a possible indicator of an anticipatory MMN enhancement due to the predictability of the second change in the deviant of the present experiment.
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    ‘I love Rock ‘n’ Roll’ - Music genre preference modulates brain responses to music
    (Elsevier Science, 2013-02)
    Istók, Eva
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    Brattico, Elvira
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    Ritter, Aileen
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    Tervaniemi, M.
    The present study examined the effect of participants' music genre preference on the neural processes underlying evaluative and cognitive judgements of music using the event-related potential technique. To this aim, two participant groups differing in their preference for Latin American and Heavy Metal music performed a liking judgement and a genre classification task on a variety of excerpts of either music genre. A late positive potential (LPP) was elicited in all conditions between 600 and 900 ms after stimulus onset. During the genre classification task, an early negativity was elicited by the preferred compared to the non-preferred music at around 230-370 ms whereas the non-preferred genre was characterized by a larger LPP. The findings suggest that evaluative and cognitive judgements of music are accompanied by affective responses and that the valence of music may spontaneously modulate early processes of music categorization even when no overt liking judgement is required.
  • Publication
    Metadata only
    Toward a neural chronometry for the aesthetic experience of music
    (Frontiers Research Foundation, 2013-05-01)
    Brattico, Elvira
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    Bogert, Brigitte
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    Music is often studied as a cognitive domain alongside language. The emotional aspects of music have also been shown to be important, but views on their nature diverge. For instance, the specific emotions that music induces and how they relate to emotional expression are still under debate. Here we propose a mental and neural chronometry of the aesthetic experience of music initiated and mediated by external and internal contexts such as intentionality, background mood, attention, and expertise. The initial stages necessary for an aesthetic experience of music are feature analysis, integration across modalities, and cognitive processing on the basis of long-term knowledge. These stages are common to individuals belonging to the same musical culture. The initial emotional reactions to music include the startle reflex, core “liking,” and arousal. Subsequently, discrete emotions are perceived and induced. Presumably somatomotor processes synchronizing the body with the music also come into play here. The subsequent stages, in which cognitive, affective, and decisional processes intermingle, require controlled cross-modal neural processes to result in aesthetic emotions, aesthetic judgments, and conscious liking. These latter aesthetic stages often require attention, intentionality, and expertise for their full actualization.
  • Publication
    Open Access
    Über Wirbelstromphänomene in Ständerstäben in Nutaustrittsbereichen leistungsstarker Turbogeneratoren
    (UB HSU, 2024-10-11)
    Kowalski, Matthias
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    Helmut-Schmidt-Universität / Universität der Bundeswehr Hamburg
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    Hirsch, Holger
    Turbogeneratoren nehmen hinsichtlich der Wandlung und Übertragung elektrischer Leistung eine Schlüsselrolle in der gegenwärtigen und zukünftigen Energiewirtschaft ein. In einer zunehmend elektrifizierten Welt ist ihre Zuverlässigkeit von essenzieller Bedeutung. Die vorliegende Dissertation ist durch eine erhöhte Schadenshäufigkeit des Isoliersystems der Ständerwicklung im Bereich des Blechpaketendes solcher Turbogeneratoren motiviert. Es wird die Arbeitshypothese aufgestellt, dass lokale Heißstellen in diesem besonders betroffenen Bereich maßgeblich zu beschleunigten Alterungsprozessen des Isoliersystems beitragen. Unter Verwendung einer neu entwickelten elektromagnetischen Submodell-Methode für Simulationen mit Finiten-Elementen, werden Wirbelstromverluste in Ständerstäben infolge radial gerichteter magnetischer Endfelder berechnet. Diese Wärmequellen werden in ein thermisches FE-Modell zur Temperaturfeldberechnung übertragen, welches lokal deutlich erhöhte Temperaturen des Ständerstabes im Nutaustrittsbereich ausweist und die Arbeitshypothese bestätigt. Ferner erfolgt die Simulation verschiedener betrieblicher sowie geometrischer Einflussgrößen, wie beispielsweise die der Abtreppungsgeometrie. Der in dieser Dissertation erzielte Wissenserwerb ermöglicht eine Optimierung künftiger elektrischer Maschinen und erhöht deren Zuverlässigkeit, was sich als wertvoller Beitrag für die bevorstehende Elektrifizierung der Zukunft erweist.