2021 |
| 112. | Mina Schütz; Alexander Schindler; Melanie Siegel; Kawa Nazemi Automatic Fake News Detection with Pre-Trained Transformer Models Inproceedings In: Del Bimbo; al (Ed.): Pattern Recognition. ICPR International Workshops and Challenges. ICPR 2021. Lecture Notes in Computer Sciences, Springer, Cham, 2021. @inproceedings{SSSN21,
title = {Automatic Fake News Detection with Pre-Trained Transformer Models},
author = {Mina Schütz and Alexander Schindler and Melanie Siegel and Kawa Nazemi},
editor = {Del Bimbo and al},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {Pattern Recognition. ICPR International Workshops and Challenges. ICPR 2021. Lecture Notes in Computer Sciences},
volume = {12667},
publisher = {Springer},
address = {Cham},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
|
| 111. | Mina Schütz; Alexander Schindler; Melanie Siegel Disinformation Detection: An Explainable Transfer Learning Approach Miscellaneous 2021. @misc{SSS21b,
title = {Disinformation Detection: An Explainable Transfer Learning Approach},
author = {Mina Schütz and Alexander Schindler and Melanie Siegel},
url = {https://www.unibw.de/code-events/code2021/04_schuetz.pdf},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {CODE2021},
address = {Munich, Germany},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
|
| 110. | Mina Schütz; Jaqueline Böck; Daria Liakhovets; Djordje Slijepčević; Armin Kirchknopf; Manuel Hecht; Johannes Bogensperger; Sven Schlarb; Alexander Schindler; Matthias Zeppelzauer Automatic Sexism Detection with Multilingual Transformer Models Inproceedings In: Manuel Montes; Paolo Rosso; Julio Gonzalo; Mario Ezra Aragón; Rodrigo Agerri; Miguel Ángel Álvarez-Carmona; Elena Álvarez Mellado; Jorge Carrillo-de-Albornoz; Luis Chiruzzo; Larissa Freitas; Helena Gómez Adorno; Yoan Gutiérrez; Salud María Jiménez Zafra; Salvador Lima-López; Flor Miriam Plaza-de-Arco; Mariona Taulé (Ed.): Proceedings of the Iberian Languages Evaluation Forum (IberLEF 2021), pp. 346-355, Málaga, Spain, 2021. @inproceedings{SBLS21,
title = {Automatic Sexism Detection with Multilingual Transformer Models},
author = {Mina Schütz and Jaqueline Böck and Daria Liakhovets and Djordje Slijepčević and Armin Kirchknopf and Manuel Hecht and Johannes Bogensperger and Sven Schlarb and Alexander Schindler and Matthias Zeppelzauer},
editor = {Manuel Montes and Paolo Rosso and Julio Gonzalo and Mario Ezra Aragón and Rodrigo Agerri and Miguel Ángel Álvarez-Carmona and Elena Álvarez Mellado and Jorge Carrillo-de-Albornoz and Luis Chiruzzo and Larissa Freitas and Helena Gómez Adorno and Yoan Gutiérrez and Salud María Jiménez Zafra and Salvador Lima-López and Flor Miriam Plaza-de-Arco and Mariona Taulé},
url = {https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2943/exist_paper1.pdf},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Iberian Languages Evaluation Forum (IberLEF 2021)},
pages = {346-355},
address = {Málaga, Spain},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
|
| 109. | Midhad Blazevic; Lennart B. Sina; Dirk Burkhardt; Melanie Siegel; Kawa Nazemi Visual Analytics and Similarity Search - Interest-based Similarity Search in Scientific Data Inproceedings In: 2021 25th International Conference Information Visualisation (IV), pp. 211-217, IEEE, 2021. @inproceedings{9582711,
title = {Visual Analytics and Similarity Search - Interest-based Similarity Search in Scientific Data},
author = {Midhad Blazevic and Lennart B. Sina and Dirk Burkhardt and Melanie Siegel and Kawa Nazemi},
doi = {10.1109/IV53921.2021.00041},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
urldate = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {2021 25th International Conference Information Visualisation (IV)},
pages = {211-217},
publisher = {IEEE},
abstract = {Visual Analytics enables solving complex analytical tasks by coupling interactive visualizations and machine learning approaches. Besides the analytical reasoning enabled through Visual Analytics, the exploration of data plays an essential role. The exploration process can be supported through similarity-based approaches that enable finding similar data to those annotated in the context of visual exploration. We propose in this paper a process of annotation in the context of exploration that leads to labeled vectors-of-interest and enables finding similar publications based on interest vectors. The generation and labeling of the interest vectors are performed automatically by the Visual Analytics system and lead to finding similar papers and categorizing the annotated papers. With this approach, we provide a categorized similarity search based on an automatically labeled interest matrix in Visual Analytics.},
keywords = {Artificial Intelligence, Collaboration, Collaborative Systems, Information visualization, Similarity, Visual analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Visual Analytics enables solving complex analytical tasks by coupling interactive visualizations and machine learning approaches. Besides the analytical reasoning enabled through Visual Analytics, the exploration of data plays an essential role. The exploration process can be supported through similarity-based approaches that enable finding similar data to those annotated in the context of visual exploration. We propose in this paper a process of annotation in the context of exploration that leads to labeled vectors-of-interest and enables finding similar publications based on interest vectors. The generation and labeling of the interest vectors are performed automatically by the Visual Analytics system and lead to finding similar papers and categorizing the annotated papers. With this approach, we provide a categorized similarity search based on an automatically labeled interest matrix in Visual Analytics. |
2020 |
| 108. | Dirk Burkhardt; Kawa Nazemi; Egils Ginters Innovations in Mobility and Logistics: Assistance of Complex Analytical Processes in Visual Trend Analytics Inproceedings In: Janis Grabis; Andrejs Romanovs; Galina Kulesova (Ed.): 2020 61st International Scientific Conference on Information Technology and Management Science of Riga Technical University (ITMS), pp. 1-6, IEEE, 2020, ISBN: 978-1-7281-9105-8. @inproceedings{Burkhardt2020c,
title = {Innovations in Mobility and Logistics: Assistance of Complex Analytical Processes in Visual Trend Analytics},
author = {Dirk Burkhardt and Kawa Nazemi and Egils Ginters},
editor = {Janis Grabis and Andrejs Romanovs and Galina Kulesova},
doi = {10.1109/ITMS51158.2020.9259309},
isbn = {978-1-7281-9105-8},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-11-19},
booktitle = {2020 61st International Scientific Conference on Information Technology and Management Science of Riga Technical University (ITMS)},
pages = {1-6},
publisher = {IEEE},
abstract = {A variety of new technologies and ideas for businesses are arising in the domain of logistics and mobility. It can be differentiated between fundamental new approaches, e.g. central packaging stations or deliveries via drones and minor technological advancements that aim on more ecologically and economic transportation. The need for analytical systems that enable identifying new technologies, innovations, business models etc. and give also the opportunity to rate those in perspective of business relevance is growing. The users’ behavior is commonly investigated in adaptive systems, which is considering the induvial preferences of users, but neglecting often the tasks and goals of the analysis. A process-related supports could assist to solve an analytical task in a more efficient and effective way. We introduce in this paper an approach that enables non-professionals to perform visual trend analysis through an advanced process assistance based on process mining and visual adaptation. This allows generating a process model based on events, which is the baseline for process support feature calculation. These features in form of visual adaptations and the process model enable assisting non-experts in complex analytical tasks.},
keywords = {Adaptive Visualization, logistics, Process Mining, Transportation, Trend Analytics, Visual analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
A variety of new technologies and ideas for businesses are arising in the domain of logistics and mobility. It can be differentiated between fundamental new approaches, e.g. central packaging stations or deliveries via drones and minor technological advancements that aim on more ecologically and economic transportation. The need for analytical systems that enable identifying new technologies, innovations, business models etc. and give also the opportunity to rate those in perspective of business relevance is growing. The users’ behavior is commonly investigated in adaptive systems, which is considering the induvial preferences of users, but neglecting often the tasks and goals of the analysis. A process-related supports could assist to solve an analytical task in a more efficient and effective way. We introduce in this paper an approach that enables non-professionals to perform visual trend analysis through an advanced process assistance based on process mining and visual adaptation. This allows generating a process model based on events, which is the baseline for process support feature calculation. These features in form of visual adaptations and the process model enable assisting non-experts in complex analytical tasks. |
| 107. | Artis Aizstrauts; Dirk Burkhardt; Egils Ginters; Kawa Nazemi On Microservice Architecture Based Communication Environment for Cycling Map Developing and Maintenance Simulator Inproceedings In: Janis Grabis; Andrejs Romanovs; Galina Kulesova (Ed.): 2020 61st International Scientific Conference on Information Technology and Management Science of Riga Technical University (ITMS), pp. 1-4, IEEE, 2020, ISBN: 978-1-7281-9105-8. @inproceedings{Aizstrauts2020c,
title = {On Microservice Architecture Based Communication Environment for Cycling Map Developing and Maintenance Simulator},
author = {Artis Aizstrauts and Dirk Burkhardt and Egils Ginters and Kawa Nazemi},
editor = {Janis Grabis and Andrejs Romanovs and Galina Kulesova},
doi = {10.1109/ITMS51158.2020.9259299},
isbn = {978-1-7281-9105-8},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-11-19},
booktitle = {2020 61st International Scientific Conference on Information Technology and Management Science of Riga Technical University (ITMS)},
pages = {1-4},
publisher = {IEEE},
abstract = {Urban transport infrastructure nowadays involves environmentally friendly modes of transport, the most democratic of which is cycling. Citizens will use bicycles if a reasonably designed cycle path scheme will be provided. Cyclists also need to know the characteristics and load of the planned route before the trip. Prediction can be provided by simulation, but it is often necessary to use heterogeneous and distributed models that require a specific communication environment to ensure interaction. The article describes the easy communication environment that is used to provide microservices communication and data exchange in a bicycle route design and maintenance multi-level simulator.},
keywords = {Easy Communication Environment, microservice architecture, Simulation},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Urban transport infrastructure nowadays involves environmentally friendly modes of transport, the most democratic of which is cycling. Citizens will use bicycles if a reasonably designed cycle path scheme will be provided. Cyclists also need to know the characteristics and load of the planned route before the trip. Prediction can be provided by simulation, but it is often necessary to use heterogeneous and distributed models that require a specific communication environment to ensure interaction. The article describes the easy communication environment that is used to provide microservices communication and data exchange in a bicycle route design and maintenance multi-level simulator. |
| 106. | Kawa Nazemi; Matthias Kowald; Till Dannewald; Dirk Burkhardt; Egils Ginters Visual Analytics Indicators for Mobility and Transportation Inproceedings In: Janis Grabis; Andrejs Romanovs; Galina Kulesova (Ed.): 2020 61st International Scientific Conference on Information Technology and Management Science of Riga Technical University (ITMS), pp. 1-6, IEEE, 2020, ISBN: 978-1-7281-9105-8. @inproceedings{Nazemi2020c,
title = {Visual Analytics Indicators for Mobility and Transportation},
author = {Kawa Nazemi and Matthias Kowald and Till Dannewald and Dirk Burkhardt and Egils Ginters},
editor = {Janis Grabis and Andrejs Romanovs and Galina Kulesova},
doi = {10.1109/ITMS51158.2020.9259321},
isbn = {978-1-7281-9105-8},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-11-19},
booktitle = {2020 61st International Scientific Conference on Information Technology and Management Science of Riga Technical University (ITMS)},
pages = {1-6},
publisher = {IEEE},
abstract = {Visual Analytics enables a deep analysis of complex and multivariate data by applying machine learning methods and interactive visualization. These complex analyses lead to gain insights and knowledge for a variety of analytics tasks to enable the decision-making process. The enablement of decision-making processes is essential for managing and planning mobility and transportation. These are influenced by a variety of indicators such as new technological developments, ecological and economic changes, political decisions and in particular humans’ mobility behaviour. New technologies will lead to a different mobility behaviour with other constraints. These changes in mobility behaviour require analytical systems to forecast the required information and probably appearing changes. These systems must consider different perspectives and employ multiple indicators. Visual Analytics enable such analytical tasks. We introduce in this paper the main indicators for Visual Analytics for mobility and transportation that are exemplary explained through two case studies.},
keywords = {mobility analytics, mobility behaviour, mobility indicators for visual analytics, Visual analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Visual Analytics enables a deep analysis of complex and multivariate data by applying machine learning methods and interactive visualization. These complex analyses lead to gain insights and knowledge for a variety of analytics tasks to enable the decision-making process. The enablement of decision-making processes is essential for managing and planning mobility and transportation. These are influenced by a variety of indicators such as new technological developments, ecological and economic changes, political decisions and in particular humans’ mobility behaviour. New technologies will lead to a different mobility behaviour with other constraints. These changes in mobility behaviour require analytical systems to forecast the required information and probably appearing changes. These systems must consider different perspectives and employ multiple indicators. Visual Analytics enable such analytical tasks. We introduce in this paper the main indicators for Visual Analytics for mobility and transportation that are exemplary explained through two case studies. |
| 105. | Lennart B. Sina; Dirk Burkhardt; Kawa Nazemi Visual Dashboards in Trend Analytics to Observe Competitors and Leading Domain Experts Inproceedings In: Haithem Afli; Udo Bleimann; Dirk Burkhardt; Robert Loew; Stefanie Regier; Ingo Stengel; Haiying Wang; Huiru (Jane) Zheng (Ed.): Proceedings of the 6th Collaborative European Research Conference (CERC 2020), pp. 222-235, CEUR-WS.org, Aachen, Germany, 2020, ISSN: 1613-0073, (urn:nbn:de:0074-2815-0). @inproceedings{Sina2021,
title = {Visual Dashboards in Trend Analytics to Observe Competitors and Leading Domain Experts},
author = {Lennart B. Sina and Dirk Burkhardt and Kawa Nazemi},
editor = {Haithem Afli and Udo Bleimann and Dirk Burkhardt and Robert Loew and Stefanie Regier and Ingo Stengel and Haiying Wang and Huiru (Jane) Zheng},
url = {http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2815/CERC2020_paper14.pdf, Paper on CEUR-WS},
issn = {1613-0073},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-09-11},
urldate = {2020-09-11},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 6th Collaborative European Research Conference (CERC 2020)},
volume = {Vol. 2815},
pages = {222-235},
publisher = {CEUR-WS.org},
address = {Aachen, Germany},
series = {CEUR Workshop Proceedings},
abstract = {The rapid change due to digitalization challenge a variety of market players and force them to find strategies to be aware of developments in these markets, particularly those that impact their business. The main challenge is what a practical solution could look like and how technology can support market players in these trend observation tasks. The paper outlines therefore a technological solution to observe specific authors e.g. researchers who influence a certain market or engineers of competitors. In many branches both are well-known groups to market players and there is almost always the need of a technology that supports the topical observation. This paper focuses on the concept of how a visual dashboard could enable a market observation and how data must be processed for it and its prototypical implementation which enables an evaluation later. Furthermore, the definition of a principal technological analysis for innovation and technology management is created and is also an important contribution to the scientific community that specifically considers the technology perspective and its corresponding requirements.},
note = {urn:nbn:de:0074-2815-0},
keywords = {business intelligence, information exploration, Innovation Management, Visual analytics, Visual Trend Analysis},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
The rapid change due to digitalization challenge a variety of market players and force them to find strategies to be aware of developments in these markets, particularly those that impact their business. The main challenge is what a practical solution could look like and how technology can support market players in these trend observation tasks. The paper outlines therefore a technological solution to observe specific authors e.g. researchers who influence a certain market or engineers of competitors. In many branches both are well-known groups to market players and there is almost always the need of a technology that supports the topical observation. This paper focuses on the concept of how a visual dashboard could enable a market observation and how data must be processed for it and its prototypical implementation which enables an evaluation later. Furthermore, the definition of a principal technological analysis for innovation and technology management is created and is also an important contribution to the scientific community that specifically considers the technology perspective and its corresponding requirements. |
| 104. | Kawa Nazemi; Maike J. Klepsch; Dirk Burkhardt; Lukas Kaupp Comparison of Full-text Articles and Abstracts for Visual Trend Analytics through Natural Language Processing Inproceedings In: 2020 24th International Conference Information Visualisation (IV), pp. 360-367, IEEE, New York, USA, 2020, ISBN: 978-1-7281-9134-8. @inproceedings{Nazemi2020d,
title = {Comparison of Full-text Articles and Abstracts for Visual Trend Analytics through Natural Language Processing},
author = {Kawa Nazemi and Maike J. Klepsch and Dirk Burkhardt and Lukas Kaupp},
doi = {10.1109/IV51561.2020.00065},
isbn = {978-1-7281-9134-8},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-09-01},
urldate = {2020-09-01},
booktitle = {2020 24th International Conference Information Visualisation (IV)},
pages = {360-367},
publisher = {IEEE},
address = {New York, USA},
abstract = {Scientific publications are an essential resource for detecting emerging trends and innovations in a very early stage, by far earlier than patents may allow. Thereby Visual Analytics systems enable a deep analysis by applying commonly unsupervised machine learning methods and investigating a mass amount of data. A main question from the Visual Analytics viewpoint in this context is, do abstracts of scientific publications provide a similar analysis capability compared to their corresponding full-texts? This would allow to extract a mass amount of text documents in a much faster manner. We compare in this paper the topic extraction methods LSI and LDA by using full text articles and their corresponding abstracts to obtain which method and which data are better suited for a Visual Analytics system for Technology and Corporate Foresight. Based on a easy replicable natural language processing approach, we further investigate the impact of lemmatization for LDA and LSI. The comparison will be performed qualitative and quantitative to gather both, the human perception in visual systems and coherence values. Based on an application scenario a visual trend analytics system illustrates the outcomes.},
keywords = {Data Science, Natural Language Processing, Visual analytics, Visual Trend Analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Scientific publications are an essential resource for detecting emerging trends and innovations in a very early stage, by far earlier than patents may allow. Thereby Visual Analytics systems enable a deep analysis by applying commonly unsupervised machine learning methods and investigating a mass amount of data. A main question from the Visual Analytics viewpoint in this context is, do abstracts of scientific publications provide a similar analysis capability compared to their corresponding full-texts? This would allow to extract a mass amount of text documents in a much faster manner. We compare in this paper the topic extraction methods LSI and LDA by using full text articles and their corresponding abstracts to obtain which method and which data are better suited for a Visual Analytics system for Technology and Corporate Foresight. Based on a easy replicable natural language processing approach, we further investigate the impact of lemmatization for LDA and LSI. The comparison will be performed qualitative and quantitative to gather both, the human perception in visual systems and coherence values. Based on an application scenario a visual trend analytics system illustrates the outcomes. |
| 103. | Lukas Kaupp; Kawa Nazemi; Bernhard Humm An Industry 4.0-Ready Visual Analytics Model for Context-Aware Diagnosis in Smart Manufacturing Inproceedings In: 2020 24th International Conference Information Visualisation (IV), pp. 350-359, IEEE, New York, USA, 2020, ISBN: 978-1-7281-9134-8. @inproceedings{Nazemi2020db,
title = {An Industry 4.0-Ready Visual Analytics Model for Context-Aware Diagnosis in Smart Manufacturing},
author = {Lukas Kaupp and Kawa Nazemi and Bernhard Humm},
doi = {10.1109/IV51561.2020.00064},
isbn = {978-1-7281-9134-8},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-09-01},
booktitle = {2020 24th International Conference Information Visualisation (IV)},
pages = {350-359},
publisher = {IEEE},
address = {New York, USA},
abstract = {The integrated cyber-physical systems in Smart Manufacturing generate continuously vast amount of data. These complex data are difficult to assess and gather knowledge about the data. Tasks like fault detection and diagnosis are therewith difficult to solve. Visual Analytics mitigates complexity through the combined use of algorithms and visualization methods that allow to perceive information in a more accurate way. Thereby, reasoning relies more and more on the given situation within a smart manufacturing environment, namely the context. Current general Visual Analytics approaches only provide a vague definition of context. We introduce in this paper a model that specifies the context in Visual Analytics for Smart Manufacturing. Additionally, our model bridges the latest advances in research on Smart Manufacturing and Visual Analytics. We combine and summarize methodologies, algorithms and specifications of both vital research fields with our previous findings and fuse them together. As a result, we propose our novel industry 4.0-ready Visual Analytics model for context-aware diagnosis in Smart Manufacturing.},
keywords = {Analytical models, cyber-physical systems, Data Science, Industries, Outlier Detection, Pipelines, Protocols, Reasoning, Smart manufacturing, Task analysis, Visual analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
The integrated cyber-physical systems in Smart Manufacturing generate continuously vast amount of data. These complex data are difficult to assess and gather knowledge about the data. Tasks like fault detection and diagnosis are therewith difficult to solve. Visual Analytics mitigates complexity through the combined use of algorithms and visualization methods that allow to perceive information in a more accurate way. Thereby, reasoning relies more and more on the given situation within a smart manufacturing environment, namely the context. Current general Visual Analytics approaches only provide a vague definition of context. We introduce in this paper a model that specifies the context in Visual Analytics for Smart Manufacturing. Additionally, our model bridges the latest advances in research on Smart Manufacturing and Visual Analytics. We combine and summarize methodologies, algorithms and specifications of both vital research fields with our previous findings and fuse them together. As a result, we propose our novel industry 4.0-ready Visual Analytics model for context-aware diagnosis in Smart Manufacturing. |
| 102. | Ebad Banissi; Farzad Khosrow-shahi; Anna Ursyn; Mark W. McK. Bannatyne; João Moura Pires; Nuno Datia; Kawa Nazemi; Boris Kovalerchuk; John Counsell; Andrew Agapiou; Zora Vrcelj; Hing-Wah Chau; Mengbi Li; Gehan Nagy; Richard Laing; Rita Francese; Muhammad Sarfraz; Fatma Bouali; Gilles Venturin; Marjan Trutschl; Urska Cvek; Heimo Müller; Minoru Nakayama; Marco Temperini; Tania Di Mascio; Filippo SciarroneVeronica Rossano; Ralf Dörner; Loredana Caruccio; Autilia Vitiello; Weidong Huang; Michele Risi; Ugo Erra; Razvan Andonie; Muhammad Aurangzeb Ahmad; Ana Figueiras; and Mabule Samuel Mabakane (Ed.) Proceedings of 2020 24th International Conference Information Visualisation (IV) Proceeding IEEE, New York, USA, 2020, ISBN: 978-1-7281-9134-8. @proceedings{Banissi2020,
title = {Proceedings of 2020 24th International Conference Information Visualisation (IV)},
editor = {Ebad Banissi and Farzad Khosrow-shahi and Anna Ursyn and Mark W. McK. Bannatyne and João Moura Pires and Nuno Datia and Kawa Nazemi and Boris Kovalerchuk and John Counsell and Andrew Agapiou and Zora Vrcelj and Hing-Wah Chau and Mengbi Li and Gehan Nagy and Richard Laing and Rita Francese and Muhammad Sarfraz and Fatma Bouali and Gilles Venturin and Marjan Trutschl and Urska Cvek and Heimo Müller and Minoru Nakayama and Marco Temperini and Tania Di Mascio and Filippo SciarroneVeronica Rossano and Ralf Dörner and Loredana Caruccio and Autilia Vitiello and Weidong Huang and Michele Risi and Ugo Erra and Razvan Andonie and Muhammad Aurangzeb Ahmad and Ana Figueiras and and Mabule Samuel Mabakane},
doi = {10.1109/IV51561.2020},
isbn = {978-1-7281-9134-8},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-09-01},
booktitle = {Information Visualisation: AI & Analytics, Biomedical Visualization, Builtviz, and Geometric Modelling & Imaging},
pages = {1-775},
publisher = {IEEE},
address = {New York, USA},
abstract = {In the current information era, most aspects of life depend on and are driven by data, information, knowledge, user experience, and cultural influences. The infrastructure of any information-dependent society relies on the quality of data, information and analysis of such entities for short to long term as well as past and future activities. Information Visualisation, Analytics, Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence and Application domains are just a few of the current state of the art developments that effectively enhance understanding of these driving forces. Several key interdependent variables are emerging that are becoming the focus of scientific activities, such as Information and Data Science, an aspect that tightly couples raw data (origin, autonomous capture, classification, incompleteness, impurity, filtering) and data scale to knowledge acquisition such that its dependencies on the domain of application and its evolution steer the next generation of research activities. Processing the relationship between these phases, from the raw data to knowledge, has added new impetus to the way these are understood and communicated. The tradition of use and communication by visualisation is deep-rooted. It helps us investigate new meanings for the humanities, history of art, design, human factors, and user experience and leads to discoveries and hypothesis analysis. Modern-day computer-aided analytics and visualisation have added momentum in developing tools that exploit 2D and 3D metaphor-driven techniques within many applied domains. The techniques are developed beyond visualisation to simplify the complexities, to reveal ambiguity, and to work with incompleteness. The next phase of this evolving field is to understand uncertainty, risk analysis, and tapping into unknowns; how this uncertainty is built into the processes that exist in all stages of the process, from raw data to the knowledge acquisition stage.
This collection of papers on this year's information visualisation forum, compiled for the 24th conference on the Information Visualization – incorporating Artificial Intelligence – analytics, machine- & deeplearning - Biomedical Visualization, Learning Analytics & Geometric Modelling and Imaging - IV2020, advocates that a new conceptual framework will emerge from information-rich disciplines like the Humanities, Psychology, Sociology, Business of everyday activities as well as the science-rich disciplines. To facilitate this, IV2020 provides the opportunity to resonate with many international and collaborative research projects as well as lectures from distinguished speakers that channels the way this new framework conceptually, as well as practically has been realised. This year's theme is enhanced further by AI, Social Networks impact on social, cultural and heritage aspect of life and learning analysis of today's multifaceted and data-rich environment.
Joining us in this search are some 100 plus researchers who reflect and share a chapter of their thoughts with fellow researchers. The papers collected, peer-reviewed by the international reviewing committee, reflect the vibrant state of information visualisation, analytics, applications, and results of the work of researchers, artists and professionals from more than 25 countries. It has allowed us to address the scope of visualisation from a much broader perspective. Each contributor to this conference has indeed added fresh perspectives and thoughts, challenges our beliefs and encouraged further our adventure of innovation.},
keywords = {Information visualization},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {proceedings}
}
In the current information era, most aspects of life depend on and are driven by data, information, knowledge, user experience, and cultural influences. The infrastructure of any information-dependent society relies on the quality of data, information and analysis of such entities for short to long term as well as past and future activities. Information Visualisation, Analytics, Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence and Application domains are just a few of the current state of the art developments that effectively enhance understanding of these driving forces. Several key interdependent variables are emerging that are becoming the focus of scientific activities, such as Information and Data Science, an aspect that tightly couples raw data (origin, autonomous capture, classification, incompleteness, impurity, filtering) and data scale to knowledge acquisition such that its dependencies on the domain of application and its evolution steer the next generation of research activities. Processing the relationship between these phases, from the raw data to knowledge, has added new impetus to the way these are understood and communicated. The tradition of use and communication by visualisation is deep-rooted. It helps us investigate new meanings for the humanities, history of art, design, human factors, and user experience and leads to discoveries and hypothesis analysis. Modern-day computer-aided analytics and visualisation have added momentum in developing tools that exploit 2D and 3D metaphor-driven techniques within many applied domains. The techniques are developed beyond visualisation to simplify the complexities, to reveal ambiguity, and to work with incompleteness. The next phase of this evolving field is to understand uncertainty, risk analysis, and tapping into unknowns; how this uncertainty is built into the processes that exist in all stages of the process, from raw data to the knowledge acquisition stage. This collection of papers on this year's information visualisation forum, compiled for the 24th conference on the Information Visualization – incorporating Artificial Intelligence – analytics, machine- & deeplearning - Biomedical Visualization, Learning Analytics & Geometric Modelling and Imaging - IV2020, advocates that a new conceptual framework will emerge from information-rich disciplines like the Humanities, Psychology, Sociology, Business of everyday activities as well as the science-rich disciplines. To facilitate this, IV2020 provides the opportunity to resonate with many international and collaborative research projects as well as lectures from distinguished speakers that channels the way this new framework conceptually, as well as practically has been realised. This year's theme is enhanced further by AI, Social Networks impact on social, cultural and heritage aspect of life and learning analysis of today's multifaceted and data-rich environment. Joining us in this search are some 100 plus researchers who reflect and share a chapter of their thoughts with fellow researchers. The papers collected, peer-reviewed by the international reviewing committee, reflect the vibrant state of information visualisation, analytics, applications, and results of the work of researchers, artists and professionals from more than 25 countries. It has allowed us to address the scope of visualisation from a much broader perspective. Each contributor to this conference has indeed added fresh perspectives and thoughts, challenges our beliefs and encouraged further our adventure of innovation. |
| 101. | Artis Aizstrauts; Egils Ginters; Dirk Burkhardt; Kawa Nazemi Bicycle Path Network Designing and Exploitation Simulation as a Microservice Architecture Inproceedings In: Egils Ginters; Mario Arturo Ruiz Estrada; Miquel Angel Piera Eroles (Ed.): ICTE in Transportation and Logistics 2019, pp. 344–351, Springer International Publishing, Cham, 2020, ISBN: 978-3-030-39688-6. @inproceedings{Aizstrauts2020,
title = {Bicycle Path Network Designing and Exploitation Simulation as a Microservice Architecture},
author = {Artis Aizstrauts and Egils Ginters and Dirk Burkhardt and Kawa Nazemi},
editor = {Egils Ginters and Mario Arturo Ruiz Estrada and Miquel Angel Piera Eroles},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-39688-6_43},
isbn = {978-3-030-39688-6},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-31},
booktitle = {ICTE in Transportation and Logistics 2019},
pages = {344--351},
publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
address = {Cham},
abstract = {Simulation is recognized as a suitable tool for sociotechnical systems research. But the variety and complexity of sociotechnical systems often leads to the need for distributed simulation solutions to understand them. Models that are built for infrastructure planning are typical examples. They combine different domains and involve variety of simulation approaches. This article proposes an easy management environment that is used for VeloRouter software -- a multi agent-based bicycle path network and exploitation simulator that is built as a microservice architecture where each domain simulation is executed as a different microservice.},
keywords = {Bicycle path network planning, Easy Communication Environment, Sociotechnical systems simulation},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Simulation is recognized as a suitable tool for sociotechnical systems research. But the variety and complexity of sociotechnical systems often leads to the need for distributed simulation solutions to understand them. Models that are built for infrastructure planning are typical examples. They combine different domains and involve variety of simulation approaches. This article proposes an easy management environment that is used for VeloRouter software -- a multi agent-based bicycle path network and exploitation simulator that is built as a microservice architecture where each domain simulation is executed as a different microservice. |
| 100. | Kawa Nazemi; Dirk Burkhardt; Lukas Kaupp; Till Dannewald; Matthias Kowald; Egils Ginters Visual Analytics in Mobility, Transportation and Logistics Inproceedings In: Egils Ginters; Mario Arturo Ruiz Estrada; Miquel Angel Piera Eroles (Ed.): ICTE in Transportation and Logistics 2019, pp. 82–89, Springer International Publishing, Cham, 2020, ISBN: 978-3-030-39688-6. @inproceedings{Nazemi2020,
title = {Visual Analytics in Mobility, Transportation and Logistics},
author = {Kawa Nazemi and Dirk Burkhardt and Lukas Kaupp and Till Dannewald and Matthias Kowald and Egils Ginters},
editor = {Egils Ginters and Mario Arturo Ruiz Estrada and Miquel Angel Piera Eroles},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-39688-6_12},
isbn = {978-3-030-39688-6},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
booktitle = {ICTE in Transportation and Logistics 2019},
pages = {82--89},
publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
address = {Cham},
abstract = {Mobility, transportation and logistics are more and more influenced by a variety of indicators such as new technological developments, ecological and economic changes, political decisions and in particular humans' mobility behavior. These indicators will lead to massive changes in our daily live with regards to mobility, transportation and logistics. New technologies will lead to a different mobility behavior with new constraints. These changes in mobility behavior and logistics require analytical systems to forecast the required information and probably appearing changes. These systems have to consider different perspectives and employ multiple indicators. Visual Analytics provides both, the analytical approaches by including machine learning approaches and interactive visualizations to enable such analytical tasks. In this paper the main indicators for Visual Analytics in the domain of mobility transportation and logistics are discussed and followed by exemplary case studies to illustrate the advantages of such systems. The examples are aimed to demonstrate the benefits of Visual Analytics in mobility.},
keywords = {Data Analytics, Mobility Behavior, Visual analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Mobility, transportation and logistics are more and more influenced by a variety of indicators such as new technological developments, ecological and economic changes, political decisions and in particular humans' mobility behavior. These indicators will lead to massive changes in our daily live with regards to mobility, transportation and logistics. New technologies will lead to a different mobility behavior with new constraints. These changes in mobility behavior and logistics require analytical systems to forecast the required information and probably appearing changes. These systems have to consider different perspectives and employ multiple indicators. Visual Analytics provides both, the analytical approaches by including machine learning approaches and interactive visualizations to enable such analytical tasks. In this paper the main indicators for Visual Analytics in the domain of mobility transportation and logistics are discussed and followed by exemplary case studies to illustrate the advantages of such systems. The examples are aimed to demonstrate the benefits of Visual Analytics in mobility. |
| 99. | Dirk Burkhardt; Kawa Nazemi; Egils Ginters Process Support and Visual Adaptation to Assist Visual Trend Analytics in Managing Transportation Innovations Inproceedings In: Egils Ginters; Mario Arturo Ruiz Estrada; Miquel Angel Piera Eroles (Ed.): ICTE in Transportation and Logistics 2019, pp. 319–327, Springer International Publishing, Cham, 2020, ISBN: 978-3-030-39688-6. @inproceedings{Burkhardt2020,
title = {Process Support and Visual Adaptation to Assist Visual Trend Analytics in Managing Transportation Innovations},
author = {Dirk Burkhardt and Kawa Nazemi and Egils Ginters},
editor = {Egils Ginters and Mario Arturo Ruiz Estrada and Miquel Angel Piera Eroles},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-39688-6_40},
isbn = {978-3-030-39688-6},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
booktitle = {ICTE in Transportation and Logistics 2019},
pages = {319--327},
publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
address = {Cham},
abstract = {In the domain of mobility and logistics, a variety of new technologies and business ideas are arising. Beside technologies that aim on ecologically and economic transportation, such as electric engines, there are also fundamental different approaches like central packaging stations or deliveries via drones. Yet, there is a growing need for analytical systems that enable identifying new technologies, innovations, business models etc. and give also the opportunity to rate those in perspective of business relevance. Commonly adaptive systems investigate only the users' behavior, while a process-related supports could assist to solve an analytical task more efficient and effective. In this article an approach that enables non-experts to perform visual trend analysis through an advanced process support based on process mining is described. This allow us to calculate a process model based on events, which is the baseline for process support feature calculation. These features and the process model enable to assist non-expert users in complex analytical tasks.},
keywords = {Adaptive Visualization, Process Mining, Transportation and Logistics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
In the domain of mobility and logistics, a variety of new technologies and business ideas are arising. Beside technologies that aim on ecologically and economic transportation, such as electric engines, there are also fundamental different approaches like central packaging stations or deliveries via drones. Yet, there is a growing need for analytical systems that enable identifying new technologies, innovations, business models etc. and give also the opportunity to rate those in perspective of business relevance. Commonly adaptive systems investigate only the users' behavior, while a process-related supports could assist to solve an analytical task more efficient and effective. In this article an approach that enables non-experts to perform visual trend analysis through an advanced process support based on process mining is described. This allow us to calculate a process model based on events, which is the baseline for process support feature calculation. These features and the process model enable to assist non-expert users in complex analytical tasks. |
2019 |
| 98. | Kawa Nazemi; Dirk Burkhardt Advanced Visual Analytical Reasoning for Technology and Innovation Management (AVARTIM) Miscellaneous Forschungstag 2019 der Hessischen Hochschulen für Angewandte Wissenschaften (HAW), Frankfurt, Germany, 2019. @misc{Nazemi2019db,
title = {Advanced Visual Analytical Reasoning for Technology and Innovation Management (AVARTIM)},
author = {Kawa Nazemi and Dirk Burkhardt},
url = {https://www.hessen.de/presse/veranstaltung/forschungstag-2019-der-hessischen-hochschulen-fuer-angewandte-wissenschaften, Event Website},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.3517296},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-10-29},
abstract = {Im Rahmen des Vorhabens soll mit „AVARTIM“ ein softwaregestützter Prozess zum Erkennen und Bewerten von Trends, Markt- und Technologiesignalen entwickelt werden, um den Prozess des Innovations- und Technologiemanagements nachhaltig zu unterstützen. Dabei soll im Rahmen des Vorhabens eine Infrastruktur an der Hochschule Darmstadt aufgebaut werden, die modular ist und somit auf technologische Veränderungen schnell reagieren kann. Die zu entwickelnde Infrastruktur dient hierbei als Vorlaufforschung und Ausgangstechnologie sowohl für den industriellen Einsatz durch und mit den KMU Partnern als auch zur Beantragung von Verbundvorhaben.},
howpublished = {Forschungstag 2019 der Hessischen Hochschulen für Angewandte Wissenschaften (HAW), Frankfurt, Germany},
keywords = {Innovation Management, Technology Management, Trend Analytics, Visual Analytical Reasoning, Visual analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Im Rahmen des Vorhabens soll mit „AVARTIM“ ein softwaregestützter Prozess zum Erkennen und Bewerten von Trends, Markt- und Technologiesignalen entwickelt werden, um den Prozess des Innovations- und Technologiemanagements nachhaltig zu unterstützen. Dabei soll im Rahmen des Vorhabens eine Infrastruktur an der Hochschule Darmstadt aufgebaut werden, die modular ist und somit auf technologische Veränderungen schnell reagieren kann. Die zu entwickelnde Infrastruktur dient hierbei als Vorlaufforschung und Ausgangstechnologie sowohl für den industriellen Einsatz durch und mit den KMU Partnern als auch zur Beantragung von Verbundvorhaben. |
| 97. | Kawa Nazemi; Dirk Burkhardt A Visual Analytics Approach for Analyzing Technological Trends in Technology and Innovation Management Inproceedings In: George Bebis; Richard Boyle; Bahram Parvin; Darko Koracin; Daniela Ushizima; Sek Chai; Shinjiro Sueda; Xin Lin; Aidong Lu; Daniel Thalmann; Chaoli Wang; Panpan Xu (Ed.): Advances in Visual Computing, pp. 283–294, Springer International Publishing, Cham, 2019, ISBN: 978-3-030-33723-0. @inproceedings{Nazemi_ISVC2019,
title = {A Visual Analytics Approach for Analyzing Technological Trends in Technology and Innovation Management},
author = {Kawa Nazemi and Dirk Burkhardt},
editor = {George Bebis and Richard Boyle and Bahram Parvin and Darko Koracin and Daniela Ushizima and Sek Chai and Shinjiro Sueda and Xin Lin and Aidong Lu and Daniel Thalmann and Chaoli Wang and Panpan Xu},
url = {https://rd.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-33723-0_23, Springer LNCS
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3473065, doi:10.5281/zenodo.3473065 (Poster)},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-33723-0_23},
isbn = {978-3-030-33723-0},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-10-09},
booktitle = {Advances in Visual Computing},
pages = {283--294},
publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
address = {Cham},
abstract = {Visual Analytics provides with a combination of automated techniques and interactive visualizations huge analysis possibilities in technology and innovation management. Thereby not only the use of machine learning data mining methods plays an important role. Due to the high interaction capabilities, it provides a more user-centered approach, where users are able to manipulate the entire analysis process and get the most valuable information. Existing Visual Analytics systems for Trend Analytics and technology and innovation management do not really make use of this unique feature and almost neglect the human in the analysis process. Outcomes from research in information search, information visualization and technology management can lead to more sophisticated Visual Analytics systems that involved the human in the entire analysis process. We propose in this paper a new interaction approach for Visual Analytics in technology and innovation management with a special focus on technological trend analytics.},
keywords = {Artificial Intelligence, Data Analytics, Human Factors, Human-centered user interfaces, Human-computer interaction (HCI), Information visualization, Intelligent Systems, maschine learning, Visual analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Visual Analytics provides with a combination of automated techniques and interactive visualizations huge analysis possibilities in technology and innovation management. Thereby not only the use of machine learning data mining methods plays an important role. Due to the high interaction capabilities, it provides a more user-centered approach, where users are able to manipulate the entire analysis process and get the most valuable information. Existing Visual Analytics systems for Trend Analytics and technology and innovation management do not really make use of this unique feature and almost neglect the human in the analysis process. Outcomes from research in information search, information visualization and technology management can lead to more sophisticated Visual Analytics systems that involved the human in the entire analysis process. We propose in this paper a new interaction approach for Visual Analytics in technology and innovation management with a special focus on technological trend analytics. |
| 96. | Dirk Burkhardt; Kawa Nazemi; Arjan Kuijper; Egils Ginters A Mobile Visual Analytics Approach for Instant Trend Analysis in Mobile Contexts Inproceedings In: 5th International Conference of the Virtual and Augmented Reality in Education (VARE2019), pp. 11–19, CAL-TEK SRL, Rende, Italy, 2019, ISBN: 978-88-85741-41-6, (Nominated for Best Paper Award). @inproceedings{Burkhardt2019b,
title = {A Mobile Visual Analytics Approach for Instant Trend Analysis in Mobile Contexts},
author = {Dirk Burkhardt and Kawa Nazemi and Arjan Kuijper and Egils Ginters},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.3473041},
isbn = {978-88-85741-41-6},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-09-18},
booktitle = {5th International Conference of the Virtual and Augmented Reality in Education (VARE2019)},
pages = {11--19},
publisher = {CAL-TEK SRL},
address = {Rende, Italy},
abstract = {The awareness of market trends becomes relevant for a broad number of market branches, in particular the more they are challenged by the digitalization. Trend analysis solutions help business executives identifying upcoming trends early. But solid market analysis takes their time and are often not available on consulting or strategy discussions. This circumstance often leads to unproductive debates where no clear strategy, technology etc. could be identified. Therefore, we propose a mobile visual trend analysis approach that enables a quick trend analysis to identify at least the most relevant and irrelevant aspects to focus debates on the relevant options. To enable an analysis like this, the exhausting analysis on powerful workstations with large screens has to adopted to mobile devices within a mobile behavior. Our main contribution is the therefore a new approach of a mobile knowledge cockpit, which provides different analytical visualizations within and intuitive interaction design.},
note = {Nominated for Best Paper Award},
keywords = {Business Analytics, Decision Support Systems, Human-Computer Interaction, Information visualization, Mobile Devices, Mobile Visual Analytics, Visual Trend Analysis},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
The awareness of market trends becomes relevant for a broad number of market branches, in particular the more they are challenged by the digitalization. Trend analysis solutions help business executives identifying upcoming trends early. But solid market analysis takes their time and are often not available on consulting or strategy discussions. This circumstance often leads to unproductive debates where no clear strategy, technology etc. could be identified. Therefore, we propose a mobile visual trend analysis approach that enables a quick trend analysis to identify at least the most relevant and irrelevant aspects to focus debates on the relevant options. To enable an analysis like this, the exhausting analysis on powerful workstations with large screens has to adopted to mobile devices within a mobile behavior. Our main contribution is the therefore a new approach of a mobile knowledge cockpit, which provides different analytical visualizations within and intuitive interaction design. |
| 95. | Egils Ginters; Dirk Burkhardt; Kawa Nazemi; Yuri Merkuryev The Concept of Augmented Reality Application for Putting Alignment in Golf Inproceedings In: 5th International Conference of the Virtual and Augmented Reality in Education (VARE 2019), pp. 20–27, CAL-TEK SRL, Rende, Italy, 2019, ISBN: 978-88-85741-41-6. @inproceedings{Ginters2019,
title = {The Concept of Augmented Reality Application for Putting Alignment in Golf},
author = {Egils Ginters and Dirk Burkhardt and Kawa Nazemi and Yuri Merkuryev},
url = {http://www.msc-les.org/proceedings/vare/2019/VARE2019.pdf, Proceedings as PDF},
isbn = {978-88-85741-41-6},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-09-18},
booktitle = {5th International Conference of the Virtual and Augmented Reality in Education (VARE 2019)},
pages = {20--27},
publisher = {CAL-TEK SRL},
address = {Rende, Italy},
abstract = {Virtual and augmented reality (VR / AR) applications have successfully overcome the critical part of the Gartner curve. Investments are made and new products entering the economy. However, a very small percentage of society have also heard about AR glasses, mainly linking these with potential identity threats and personal data breaches. The authors dealt with the design of application of AR to improve golf skills by improving the putting technique. The above solution is complicated by requiring complex object recognition, tracking and advanced AR software designing.},
keywords = {Android, Augmented Reality, Intelligent Training, Object Tracking, Objects Recognition},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Virtual and augmented reality (VR / AR) applications have successfully overcome the critical part of the Gartner curve. Investments are made and new products entering the economy. However, a very small percentage of society have also heard about AR glasses, mainly linking these with potential identity threats and personal data breaches. The authors dealt with the design of application of AR to improve golf skills by improving the putting technique. The above solution is complicated by requiring complex object recognition, tracking and advanced AR software designing. |
| 94. | Kawa Nazemi; Dirk Burkhardt Visual Text Analytics for Technology and Innovation Management Miscellaneous Presented at OpenRheinMain Conference (ORM2019), 13 September 2019, Darmstadt, Germany, 2019. @misc{Nazemi2019c,
title = {Visual Text Analytics for Technology and Innovation Management},
author = {Kawa Nazemi and Dirk Burkhardt},
url = {https://www.openrheinmain.org/2019/presentations/visual_text_analytics_for_technology_and_innovation_management.pdf, Presentation as PDF},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.3408391},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-09-13},
abstract = {Through coupling of Data Mining, Visual Analytics and Business Analytics techniques, we created a novel solution for strategic market analysis with focus on early trend recognition. As fundament, we are able to consider a variety of text data, as for instance research publications available from a number of (open access) digital libraries, reports and other data from companies, web data about markets as well as news from companies or social media data etc. In an advanced and unified processing pipeline, the information is extracted and mined for a variety of analytical purposes. Via an interactive analysis user-interface, domain experts are able to analysis strong and weak signals in perspective of upcoming trends.},
howpublished = {Presented at OpenRheinMain Conference (ORM2019), 13 September 2019, Darmstadt, Germany},
keywords = {Business Analytics, Innovation Management, Technology Management, Text Analysis, Trend Analytics, Visual Text Analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Through coupling of Data Mining, Visual Analytics and Business Analytics techniques, we created a novel solution for strategic market analysis with focus on early trend recognition. As fundament, we are able to consider a variety of text data, as for instance research publications available from a number of (open access) digital libraries, reports and other data from companies, web data about markets as well as news from companies or social media data etc. In an advanced and unified processing pipeline, the information is extracted and mined for a variety of analytical purposes. Via an interactive analysis user-interface, domain experts are able to analysis strong and weak signals in perspective of upcoming trends. |
| 93. | Kawa Nazemi; Dirk Burkhardt Visual Analytics for Analyzing Technological Trends from Text Inproceedings In: 2019 23rd International Conference Information Visualisation (IV), pp. 191-200, IEEE, 2019, ISSN: 2375-0138, (Best Paper Award). @inproceedings{Nazemi2019d,
title = {Visual Analytics for Analyzing Technological Trends from Text},
author = {Kawa Nazemi and Dirk Burkhardt},
doi = {10.1109/IV.2019.00041},
issn = {2375-0138},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-07-01},
urldate = {2019-07-01},
booktitle = {2019 23rd International Conference Information Visualisation (IV)},
pages = {191-200},
publisher = {IEEE},
abstract = {The awareness of emerging technologies is essential for strategic decision making in enterprises. Emerging and decreasing technological trends could lead to strengthening the competitiveness and market positioning. The exploration, detection and identification of such trends can be essentially supported through information visualization, trend mining and in particular through the combination of those. Commonly, trends appear first in science and scientific documents. However, those documents do not provide sufficient information for analyzing and identifying emerging trends. It is necessary to enrich data, extract information from the integrated data, measure the gradient of trends over time and provide effective interactive visualizations. We introduce in this paper an approach for integrating, enriching, mining, analyzing, identifying and visualizing emerging trends from scientific documents. Our approach enhances the state of the art in visual trend analytics by investigating the entire analysis process and providing an approach for enabling human to explore undetected potentially emerging trends.},
note = {Best Paper Award},
keywords = {Artificial Intelligence, Data Mining, Data Models, Data Visualization, emerging trend identification, Hidden Markov models, Information visualization, Market research, Patents, Trend Analytics, Visual analytics, visual business analytics, Visualization},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
The awareness of emerging technologies is essential for strategic decision making in enterprises. Emerging and decreasing technological trends could lead to strengthening the competitiveness and market positioning. The exploration, detection and identification of such trends can be essentially supported through information visualization, trend mining and in particular through the combination of those. Commonly, trends appear first in science and scientific documents. However, those documents do not provide sufficient information for analyzing and identifying emerging trends. It is necessary to enrich data, extract information from the integrated data, measure the gradient of trends over time and provide effective interactive visualizations. We introduce in this paper an approach for integrating, enriching, mining, analyzing, identifying and visualizing emerging trends from scientific documents. Our approach enhances the state of the art in visual trend analytics by investigating the entire analysis process and providing an approach for enabling human to explore undetected potentially emerging trends. |
| 92. | Kawa Nazemi Visual Trend Analytics in Digital Libraries Miscellaneous Contribution at ASIS&T European Chapter Seminar on Information Science Trends: Search Engines and Information Retrieval., 2019. @misc{Naz19ASIST,
title = {Visual Trend Analytics in Digital Libraries},
author = {Kawa Nazemi},
url = {https://zenodo.org/record/3264801#.XSBcMo_gpaR, Zenodo Open Access},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.3264801},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-04-26},
abstract = {The early awareness of upcoming trends in technology enables a more goal-directed and efficient way for deciding future strategic directions in enterprises and research. Possible sources for this valuable information are ubiquitously and freely available in the Web, e.g. news services, companies’ reports, social media platforms and blog infrastructures. To support users in handling these information sources and to keep track of the newest developments, current information systems make intensively use of information retrieval methods that extract relevant information out of the mass amount of data. The related information systems are commonly focused on providing users with easy access to information of their interest and deal with the access to information items and resources [1], but they neither provide an overview of the content nor enable the exploration of emerging or decreasing trends for inferring possible future innovations. The gathering and analysis of this continuously increasing knowledge pool is a very tedious and time-consuming task and borders on the limits of manual feasibility. The interactive overview on data, the continuous changes in data, and the ability to explore data and gain insights are sufficiently supported by Visual Analytics and information visualization approaches, whereas the appliance of such approach in combination with trend analysis are rarely propagated. In fact, these so-called early signals require not only an analysis through machine learning techniques to identify emerging trends, but also human interaction and intervention to adapt the parameters used to their own needs [2]. There are two main aspects to consider in the analysis process: 1) which data reveal very early trends and 2) how can human be involved in the analysis process [3].},
howpublished = {Contribution at ASIS&T European Chapter Seminar on Information Science Trends: Search Engines and Information Retrieval.},
keywords = {Information visualization, Trend analysis, Trend Analytics, Visual analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
The early awareness of upcoming trends in technology enables a more goal-directed and efficient way for deciding future strategic directions in enterprises and research. Possible sources for this valuable information are ubiquitously and freely available in the Web, e.g. news services, companies’ reports, social media platforms and blog infrastructures. To support users in handling these information sources and to keep track of the newest developments, current information systems make intensively use of information retrieval methods that extract relevant information out of the mass amount of data. The related information systems are commonly focused on providing users with easy access to information of their interest and deal with the access to information items and resources [1], but they neither provide an overview of the content nor enable the exploration of emerging or decreasing trends for inferring possible future innovations. The gathering and analysis of this continuously increasing knowledge pool is a very tedious and time-consuming task and borders on the limits of manual feasibility. The interactive overview on data, the continuous changes in data, and the ability to explore data and gain insights are sufficiently supported by Visual Analytics and information visualization approaches, whereas the appliance of such approach in combination with trend analysis are rarely propagated. In fact, these so-called early signals require not only an analysis through machine learning techniques to identify emerging trends, but also human interaction and intervention to adapt the parameters used to their own needs [2]. There are two main aspects to consider in the analysis process: 1) which data reveal very early trends and 2) how can human be involved in the analysis process [3]. |
| 91. | Udo Bleimann; Dirk Burkhardt; Bernhard Humm; Robert Loew; Stefanie Regier; Ingo Stengel; Paul Walsh (Ed.) Proceedings of the 5th Collaborative European Research Conference (CERC 2019) Proceeding CEUR-WS.org, Aachen, Germany, vol. Vol. 2348, 2019, ISSN: 1613-0073, (urn:nbn:de:0074-2348-5). @proceedings{CERC2019,
title = {Proceedings of the 5th Collaborative European Research Conference (CERC 2019)},
editor = {Udo Bleimann and Dirk Burkhardt and Bernhard Humm and Robert Loew and Stefanie Regier and Ingo Stengel and Paul Walsh},
url = {http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2348/, Proceedings on CEUR-WS},
issn = {1613-0073},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-04-19},
booktitle = {CERC2019 Proceedings},
volume = {Vol. 2348},
publisher = {CEUR-WS.org},
address = {Aachen, Germany},
series = {CEUR Workshop Proceedings},
abstract = {In today's world, which has recently seen fractures and isolation forming among states, international and interdisciplinary collaboration is an increasingly important source of progress. Collaboration is a rich source of innovation and growth. It is the goal of the Collaborative European Research Conference (CERC 2019) to foster collaboration among friends and colleagues across disciplines and nations within Europe. CERC emerged from a long-standing cooperation between the Cork Institute of Technology, Ireland and Hochschule Darmstadt - University of Applied Sciences, Germany. CERC has grown to include more well-established partners in Germany (Hochschule Karlsruhe and Fernuniversität Hagen), United Kingdom, Greece, Spain, Italy, and many more.
CERC is truly interdisciplinary, bringing together new and experienced researchers from science, engineering, business, humanities, and the arts. At CERC researchers not only present their findings as published in their research papers. They are also challenged to collaboratively work out joint aspects of their research during conference sessions and informal social events and gatherings.
To organize such an event involves the hard work of many people. Thanks go to the international program committee and my fellow program chairs, particularly to Prof Udo Bleimann and Prof Ingo Stengel for supporting me in the review process. Dirk Burkhardt and Dr Robert Loew put a great effort into setting up the website and conference management system and preparing the conference programme and proceedings. Many of my colleagues from Hochschule Darmstadt were invaluable for local organization. Thanks also to Hochschule Darmstadt and the Research Center for Applied Informatics (FZAI) for financial support.},
note = {urn:nbn:de:0074-2348-5},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {proceedings}
}
In today's world, which has recently seen fractures and isolation forming among states, international and interdisciplinary collaboration is an increasingly important source of progress. Collaboration is a rich source of innovation and growth. It is the goal of the Collaborative European Research Conference (CERC 2019) to foster collaboration among friends and colleagues across disciplines and nations within Europe. CERC emerged from a long-standing cooperation between the Cork Institute of Technology, Ireland and Hochschule Darmstadt - University of Applied Sciences, Germany. CERC has grown to include more well-established partners in Germany (Hochschule Karlsruhe and Fernuniversität Hagen), United Kingdom, Greece, Spain, Italy, and many more. CERC is truly interdisciplinary, bringing together new and experienced researchers from science, engineering, business, humanities, and the arts. At CERC researchers not only present their findings as published in their research papers. They are also challenged to collaboratively work out joint aspects of their research during conference sessions and informal social events and gatherings. To organize such an event involves the hard work of many people. Thanks go to the international program committee and my fellow program chairs, particularly to Prof Udo Bleimann and Prof Ingo Stengel for supporting me in the review process. Dirk Burkhardt and Dr Robert Loew put a great effort into setting up the website and conference management system and preparing the conference programme and proceedings. Many of my colleagues from Hochschule Darmstadt were invaluable for local organization. Thanks also to Hochschule Darmstadt and the Research Center for Applied Informatics (FZAI) for financial support. |
| 90. | Mohammed Alshammari; Olfa Nasraoui; Scott Sanders Mining Semantic Knowledge Graphs to Add Explainability to Black Box Recommender Systems Journal Article In: IEEE Access, vol. 7, pp. 110563-110579, 2019. @article{ANS19,
title = {Mining Semantic Knowledge Graphs to Add Explainability to Black Box Recommender Systems},
author = {Mohammed Alshammari and Olfa Nasraoui and Scott Sanders},
doi = {10.1109/ACCESS.2019.2934633},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-01-01},
journal = {IEEE Access},
volume = {7},
pages = {110563-110579},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
|
| 89. | Kawa Nazemi; Dirk Burkhardt Visual analytical dashboards for comparative analytical tasks – a case study on mobility and transportation Journal Article In: ICTE in Transportation and Logistics 2018 (ICTE 2018), vol. 149, pp. 138-150, 2019, ISSN: 1877-0509. @article{Nazemi2019,
title = {Visual analytical dashboards for comparative analytical tasks – a case study on mobility and transportation},
author = {Kawa Nazemi and Dirk Burkhardt},
url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1877050919301243, Link to Publisher},
doi = {10.1016/j.procs.2019.01.117},
issn = {1877-0509},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-01-01},
journal = {ICTE in Transportation and Logistics 2018 (ICTE 2018)},
volume = {149},
pages = {138-150},
series = {Procedia Computer Science},
abstract = {Mobility, logistics and transportation are emerging fields of research and application. Humans’ mobility behavior plays an increasing role for societal challenges. Beside the societal challenges these areas are strongly related to technologies and innovations. Gathering information about emerging technologies plays an increasing role for the entire research in these areas. Humans’ information processing can be strongly supported by Visual Analytics that combines automatic modelling and interactive visualizations. The juxtapose orchestration of interactive visualization enables gathering more information in a shorter time. We propose in this paper an approach that goes beyond the established methods of dashboarding and enables visualizing different databases, data-sets and sub-sets of data with juxtaposed visual interfaces. Our approach should be seen as an expandable method. Our main contributions are an in-depth analysis of visual task models and an approach for juxtaposing visual layouts as visual dashboards to enable solving complex tasks. We illustrate our main outcome through a case study that investigates the area of mobility and illustrates how complex analytical tasks can be performed easily by combining different visual interfaces.},
keywords = {Data Analytics, Information visualization, Mobility, Prediction, Transportation, Visual analytics, Visual Interfaces, Visual Tasks},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Mobility, logistics and transportation are emerging fields of research and application. Humans’ mobility behavior plays an increasing role for societal challenges. Beside the societal challenges these areas are strongly related to technologies and innovations. Gathering information about emerging technologies plays an increasing role for the entire research in these areas. Humans’ information processing can be strongly supported by Visual Analytics that combines automatic modelling and interactive visualizations. The juxtapose orchestration of interactive visualization enables gathering more information in a shorter time. We propose in this paper an approach that goes beyond the established methods of dashboarding and enables visualizing different databases, data-sets and sub-sets of data with juxtaposed visual interfaces. Our approach should be seen as an expandable method. Our main contributions are an in-depth analysis of visual task models and an approach for juxtaposing visual layouts as visual dashboards to enable solving complex tasks. We illustrate our main outcome through a case study that investigates the area of mobility and illustrates how complex analytical tasks can be performed easily by combining different visual interfaces. |
| 88. | Dirk Burkhardt; Kawa Nazemi Visual legal analytics – A visual approach to analyze law-conflicts of e-Services for e-Mobility and transportation domain Journal Article In: ICTE in Transportation and Logistics 2018 (ICTE 2018), vol. 149, pp. 515-524, 2019, ISSN: 1877-0509. @article{Burkhardt2019,
title = {Visual legal analytics – A visual approach to analyze law-conflicts of e-Services for e-Mobility and transportation domain},
author = {Dirk Burkhardt and Kawa Nazemi},
url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1877050919301784, Link to Publisher},
doi = {10.1016/j.procs.2019.01.170},
issn = {1877-0509},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-01-01},
journal = {ICTE in Transportation and Logistics 2018 (ICTE 2018)},
volume = {149},
pages = {515-524},
series = {Procedia Computer Science},
abstract = {The impact of the electromobility has next to the automotive industry also an increasing impact on the transportation and logistics domain. In particular the today’s starting switches to electronic trucks/scooter lead to massive changes in the organization and planning in this field. Public funding or tax reduction for environment friendly solutions forces also the growth of new mobility and transportation services. However, the vast changes in this domain and the high number of innovations of new technologies and services leads also into a critical legal uncertainty. The clarification of a legal status for a new technology or service can become cost intensive in a dimension that in particular startups could not invest. In this paper we therefore introduce a new approach to identify and analyze legal conflicts based on a business model or plan against existing laws. The intention is that an early awareness of critical legal aspect could enable an early adoption of the planned service to ensure its legality. Our main contribution is distinguished in two parts. Firstly, a new Norm-graph visualization approach to show laws and legal aspects in an easier understandable manner. And secondly, a Visual Legal Analytics approach to analyze legal conflicts e.g. on the basis of a business plans. The Visual Legal Analytics approach aims to provide a visual analysis interface to validate the automatically identified legal conflicts resulting from the pre-processing stage with a graphical overview about the derivation down to the law roots and the option to check the original sources to get further details. At the end analyst can so verify conflicts as relevant and resolve it by advancing e.g. the business plan or as irrelevant. An evaluation performed with lawyers has proofed our approach.},
keywords = {E-Government, e-Mobility Services, e-Transportation Services, Law Visualization, Legal analysis, Semantic Data, Visual analytics},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
The impact of the electromobility has next to the automotive industry also an increasing impact on the transportation and logistics domain. In particular the today’s starting switches to electronic trucks/scooter lead to massive changes in the organization and planning in this field. Public funding or tax reduction for environment friendly solutions forces also the growth of new mobility and transportation services. However, the vast changes in this domain and the high number of innovations of new technologies and services leads also into a critical legal uncertainty. The clarification of a legal status for a new technology or service can become cost intensive in a dimension that in particular startups could not invest. In this paper we therefore introduce a new approach to identify and analyze legal conflicts based on a business model or plan against existing laws. The intention is that an early awareness of critical legal aspect could enable an early adoption of the planned service to ensure its legality. Our main contribution is distinguished in two parts. Firstly, a new Norm-graph visualization approach to show laws and legal aspects in an easier understandable manner. And secondly, a Visual Legal Analytics approach to analyze legal conflicts e.g. on the basis of a business plans. The Visual Legal Analytics approach aims to provide a visual analysis interface to validate the automatically identified legal conflicts resulting from the pre-processing stage with a graphical overview about the derivation down to the law roots and the option to check the original sources to get further details. At the end analyst can so verify conflicts as relevant and resolve it by advancing e.g. the business plan or as irrelevant. An evaluation performed with lawyers has proofed our approach. |