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Evaluation of a Contactless Accelerometer Sensor System for Heart Rate Monitoring During Sleep
(2024)
The monitoring of a patient's heart rate (HR) is critical in the diagnosis of diseases. In the detection of sleep disorders, it also plays an important role. Several techniques have been proposed, including using sensors to record physiological signals that are automatically examined and analysed. This work aims to evaluate using a contactless HR monitoring system based on an accelerometer sensor during sleep. For this purpose, the oscillations caused by chest movements during heart contractions are recorded by an installation mounted under the bed mattress. The processing algorithm presented in this paper filters the signals and determines the HR. As a result, an average error of about 5 bpm has been documented, i.e., the system can be considered to be used for the forecasted domain.
Infrastructure-making in interwar India was a dynamic, multilayered process involving roads and vehicles in urban and rural sites. One of their strongest playgrounds was Bombay Presidency and the Central Provinces in central and western India. Focusing on this region in the interwar period, this paper analyzes the varied relationship between peasant households and town-centred modernizing agents in the making of road transport infrastructures. The central argument of this paper is about the persistence of bullock carts over motor cars in the region. This persistence was grounded in the specific regional environment, the effects of the 1930s economic depression, and the priorities of social classes. Pinpointing these connections, the paper highlights that “modernization” of infrastructure was not a simple, linear process of progressivist change, nor did it mean the survival of apparently “old” technologies in the modern era. Instead, the paper pays attention to conflicting social complexities, implications, and meanings of the connection between infrastructure and modernity that modernization assumptions often overlook. Here, the paper shows how technological change occurred as a result of real, material class interests pulling infrastructural technology in different directions. This was where and why arguments of road-motor lobbyists and cart advocates eventually clashed, and Gandhian social workers resisted motor transport in defense of peasant interests.
Trotz des dringenden Erfordernisses einer nachhaltigen und unabhängigen Energieerzeugung und bereits steigender Anteile photovoltaisch erzeugten Stroms stockt die Verbreitung der bauwerkintegrierten Photovoltaik (BIPV). Zahlreiche „Leuchtturm“-Projekte zeigen das große ästhetische Potential solaraktiver Bauteile und dennoch werden insbesondere von Architekt/innen-Seite neben vermeintlichen Einschränkungen in der planerischen Freiheit immer wieder auch gestalterische Vorbehalte angeführt.
Bisher wurde im Zusammenhang mit PV-Bauteilen schwerpunktmäßig die technische und konstruktive Einfügung thematisiert. Um einen Beitrag zur Diskussion um die Entwicklung visuell überzeugender Ergebnisse zu leisten, die verhindern, dass photovoltaische Bauteile am Gebäude als Fremdkörper wahrgenommen werden, ermittelt die vorliegende Arbeit auf der Grundlage ästhetischer Architekturtheorien allgemeingültige Kriterien für architektonische Wirkungsqualität und transferiert diese auf den Bereich der BIPV-Gestaltung.
Dabei werden zum Verständnis erforderliche Grundlagen der BIPV-Systemtechnik vermittelt sowie verfügbare Bauteile und die unterschiedlichen Akteure und Ziele bei der Gestaltung von BIPV aufzeigt. Auch die speziellen funktionalen und technischen Anforderungen, die PV-Bauteile als „aktive“ Bauteile stellen, werden berücksichtigt und hinsichtlich ihrer hemmenden oder synergetischen Wechselwirkungen differenziert.
Im Rahmen einer Projektstudie finden die oben genannten Kriterien Anwendung auf 13 „best practice“-Beispiele aktueller Wettbewerbsgewinner des vom Solarenergieförderverein Bayern e. V. (SeV) ausgelobten „Architekturpreis Gebäudeintegrierte Solartechnik“, die in Form von Steckbriefen vergleichend dargestellt werden.
Das Ergebnis ist die Synthese eines Kriterienkatalogs als Orientierungs-, Planungs- und Kommunikationswerkzeug, in dem alle Ergebnisse systematisiert zusammengestellt werden.
Ergänzend wird in einem kurzen Exkurs auf von der Hauptuntersuchung ausgenommene, für die Praxis aber relevante Schnittstellen zu wirtschaftlichen Aspekten eingegangen.
In the digital age, information technology (IT) is a strategic asset for organizations. As a result, the IT costs are rising, and the cost-effective management of IT is crucial. Nevertheless, organizations still face major challenges and former studies lack comprehensiveness and depth. The goal of this paper is to generate a deep and holistic view on current management challenges of IT costs. In 15 expert interviews, we identify 23 challenges divided into 7 categories. The main challenges are to ensure transparency on IT cost information, to demonstrate the business impact of IT as well as to change the mindset for the value of IT and overcoming them requires attention to their interactions. Hence, this paper leads to a better understanding of the issues that IT cost management (ITCM) faces in the digital age and builds a base for future research.
Nowadays, organizations must invest strategically in information technology (IT) and choose the right digital initiatives to maximize their benefit. Nevertheless, Chief Information Officers still struggle to communicate IT costs and demonstrate the business value of IT. The goal of this paper is to support their effective communication. In focus groups, we analyzed how different stakeholders perceive IT costs and the business value of IT as the basis of communication. We identified 16 success factors to establish effective communication. Hence, this paper enables a better understanding of the perception and the operationalization of effective communication.
Prior quantitative research identified in the text of technology-based ventures' business plans distinctive performance patterns of evolving business models. Accordingly, interactions with customers, financiers, and people and the patenting strategy's status evolved and served as indicators of early-stage tech ventures' performance. With longitudinal data from five venture cases, this research sheds light on the evolving business model by validating the performance patterns, and elucidating how and why the ventures' business models evolved. Based on a generic systems theory framework for the indicators, the explanatory case studies re-contextualize the performance patterns taken from the snapshot perspective of business plans to the longitudinal perspective of technology-based ventures' life-cycle. This research confirms the relation of business model patterns of digital and non-digital ventures to the performance groups of failure, survival, or success and suggests a broader systems perspective for further research.
The digital transformation of business processes and the integration of IT systems leads to opportunities and risks for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Risks that can result in a lack of IT Governance, Risk and Compliance (GRC). The purpose of this paper is to present the Design and Evaluation phase of creating an artefact, to reduce these risks. With this, the Design Science Research approach based on Hevner is using. The artefact will be developed by selecting relevant existing frameworks and the identification of SME-specific competencies. The method enables IT-GRC managers to transfer or adapt the frameworks to an SME organizational structure. The results from ten interviews and further three feedback loops showed that the method can be applied in practice and that a tailoring of established frameworks can take place. Contrary to the previous basic orientation of the research, this paper focuses on the concretization of approaches.
This study aims to adapt CEFR in developing an integrative approach-based teaching material model for a pre-basic BISOL class. The method used in this research is the development research design by Borg and Gall. This study was development research. The stages are identification of the problem, formulation of a hypothetical draft model; feasibility testing by experts; product revision; and test product effectiveness. The data were collected through survey techniques, interviews, and documentation. The needs identification results revealed data encompassing 10 themes, 5 tasks per theme, and diverse evaluations comprising theory, in-class practice, and real-world field assignments, both on an individual and group basis. These identified needs require alignment with CEFR A1 for the development of BISOL learning. These findings were subsequently incorporated into the design of the teaching material model, and the results indicated that tailoring CEFR to BISOL as an integrative language teaching material model was feasible for application in the classroom, as assessed by experts. The implications suggest that integrating CEFR into BISOL is highly feasible for the development of teaching materials, and teachers can leverage this instructional model to enhance students' proficiency in the Indonesian language.
The random matrix approach is a robust algorithm to filter the mean and covariance matrix of noisy observations of a dynamic object. Afterward, virtual measurement models can be used to find iteratively the extent parameters of an object that would cause the same statistical moments within their measurements. In previous work, this was limited to elliptical targets and only contour measurements.In this paper, we introduce the parallel use of an elliptical, triangular and rectangular-shaped virtual measurement model and a shape classification that selects the model that fits best to the measurements. The measurement likelihood is modeled either via ray tracing, a uniformly or normally spatial distribution over the object’s extent or as a combination of those.The results show that the extent estimation works precisely and that the classification accuracy highly depends on the measurement noise.