Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2019 (84) (entfernen)
Dokumenttyp
Sprache
- Deutsch (33)
- Englisch (33)
- Französisch (18)
Schlagworte
- Schüler (25)
- Deutschland (19)
- Luxemburg (19)
- Leistungsbewertung (17)
- Rückmeldung (17)
- Unterricht (17)
- Mitbestimmung (16)
- Schülerpartizipation (16)
- Unterrichtsgestaltung (16)
- Schule (10)
- Schulentwicklung (9)
- demokratische Erziehung (9)
- politische Pädagogik (9)
- Kultur (8)
- Optimierung (4)
- Fernerkundung (3)
- Saar-Lor-Lux (3)
- Stichprobe (3)
- Bodenmikrobiologie (2)
- Familienbetrieb (2)
- Finanzierung (2)
- Forschung (2)
- Forschungsdaten (2)
- Grenzüberschreitende Kooperation (2)
- Großregion (2)
- Management (2)
- Modellierung (2)
- Neuroendokrines System (2)
- Stressreaktion (2)
- 17. Jahrhundert (1)
- Abwasser (1)
- Aktivierung (1)
- Akzeptanz (1)
- Allokation (1)
- Alltag (1)
- Amtliche Statistik (1)
- Analysis (1)
- Analysis on fractals (1)
- Anorexia nervosa (1)
- Anpassung (1)
- Antarctic (1)
- Antarktis (1)
- Approximation (1)
- Arbeitsgedächtnis (1)
- Arbeitsmarkt (1)
- Assistance System (1)
- Aussiedler (1)
- Ausstellung (1)
- Autokorrelation (1)
- Automation of Simulation (1)
- Außenbeziehungen (1)
- BRDF (1)
- BWL (1)
- Behavioral model (1)
- Belgien (1)
- Berufsbild (1)
- Berufsbildung (1)
- Berufsschüler (1)
- Bildung (1)
- Biodiversität (1)
- Bodenwasser (1)
- Burnout-Syndrom (1)
- Business Angel (1)
- Business Angels (1)
- Capital structure (1)
- Computational Statistics (1)
- Coposititive, Infinite Dimension (1)
- Crop classification (1)
- DNS-Sequenz (1)
- Depression (1)
- Deutschland (Sowjetische Zone) (1)
- Discrete optimization (1)
- Diskretisierung (1)
- Edward Steichen (1)
- Einstellungen (1)
- Einzugsgebiet (1)
- Energiepflanzen (1)
- Entrepreneurial Finance (1)
- Entwicklung (1)
- Enzymes (1)
- Epistemology of Simulation (1)
- Erlebnisbericht (1)
- Erwachsener (1)
- Europa (1)
- Europäische Union / Wasserrahmenrichtlinie (1)
- Evapotranspiration (1)
- Exposure time (1)
- Family business (1)
- Family firm (1)
- Feldforschung (1)
- Feldfrucht (1)
- Firm performance (1)
- Flugkörper (1)
- Forest evapotranspiration (1)
- Fotografie (1)
- Fraktal (1)
- Frankreich (1)
- Gedächtnis (1)
- Genetische Variabilität (1)
- Geschichte (1)
- Geschlechterrolle (1)
- Gesundheit (1)
- Gesundheitsinformationen (1)
- Gesundheitsinformationskompetenz (1)
- Gesundheitsinteresse (1)
- Gewohnheit (1)
- Governance (1)
- Grande Région (1)
- Grenzarbeitnehmer (1)
- Grenze (1)
- Grenzüberschreitende Raumplanung/Aménagement du territoire transfrontalier (1)
- Grenzüberschreitende Zusammenarbeit (1)
- Großregion/Grande Région (1)
- HPA (1)
- Haushalt (1)
- Huttig, Willi (1)
- Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (1)
- Hypothesis Testing (1)
- Information Retrieval (1)
- Informationsgewohnheiten (1)
- Informationskompetenz (1)
- Infrarotthermographie (1)
- Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) (1)
- Interesse (1)
- Japan (1)
- Japanology (1)
- Kapitalstruktur (1)
- Katabatischer Wind (1)
- Kirchenmusik (1)
- Klassenrat (1)
- Kooperationsforschung (1)
- Kriging (1)
- Kultursoziologie (1)
- Körpererfahrung (1)
- Künstler (1)
- Künstler <Motiv> (1)
- LAP (1)
- Langzeitgedächtnis (1)
- Learning (1)
- Lernen (1)
- Long-term memory (1)
- Luxembourg (1)
- M&A decision criteria (1)
- M&A process (1)
- MODIS ice surface temperatures (1)
- Maisanbau (1)
- Maschinelles Lernen (1)
- Mayr, Johann Ulrich (1)
- Mehrsprachigkeit (1)
- Memory (1)
- Meta-analysis (1)
- MinION (1)
- Mittbestimmung (1)
- Mixed-integer optimization (1)
- Modernity (1)
- Multi-Level Modelling (1)
- Multilineare Algebra (1)
- Multispektralfotografie (1)
- Museum; Heimat; Wallonien; Luxemburg (1)
- Nanopartikel (1)
- Nichtlineare Optimierung (1)
- Nonlocal convection-diffusion (1)
- Norwegen (1)
- Numerische Mathematik (1)
- Oxford Nanopore Technologies (1)
- Partizipation (1)
- Patientenorientierte Medizin (1)
- Patientin (1)
- Penalized Maximum Likelihood (1)
- Persönlichkeitseigenschaften (1)
- Photographie (1)
- Planspiel/jeu de simulation (1)
- Planungspraxis/pratique d'aménagement (1)
- Politische Beteiligung (1)
- Potentialanalyse (1)
- Pratique du quotidien (1)
- Praxeologie (1)
- Prediction (1)
- Professionalisierung (1)
- Professionalisierung Sozialer Arbeit (1)
- Pseudogley (1)
- Psychobiologie (1)
- Psychometrie (1)
- Psychotherapie (1)
- Raumordnung (1)
- Rechte Hemisphäre (1)
- Rechtsvergleichung (1)
- Reduktion (1)
- Regression (1)
- Regression Kriging (1)
- Regression estimator, household surveys, calibration, weighting, integrated weighting (1)
- Regressionsanalyse (1)
- Regressionsmodell (1)
- Reihenfolgeproblem (1)
- Resilienz (1)
- Return migration, remigration, resettlers, Russia, Germany, married couples, family, gender, women, men, decision, motives (1)
- Revue (1)
- Revuetheater (1)
- Rheinland-Pfalz (1)
- Risikokapital (1)
- Robust Statistics (1)
- Robust optimization (1)
- Roos, Johann Heinrich (1)
- Rückkehr, Remigration, Aussiedler, Russland, Deutschland, Ehepaare, Familie, Gender, Frauen, Männer, Geschlecht, Entscheidung, Motive (1)
- Rückwanderung (1)
- SaarLorLux (1)
- Satellitenfernerkundung (1)
- Schelfeis (1)
- Schopenhauer (1)
- Schopenhauer, Arthur (1)
- Schulpolitik (1)
- Schweiz (1)
- Schätzfunktion (1)
- Schätzung (1)
- Schülermitverwaltung (1)
- Schülerzeitung (1)
- Selbstbildnis (1)
- Selbstporträt (1)
- Sequenzanalyse / Chemie (1)
- Sibirien (West) (1)
- Silber (1)
- Silver nanoparticles (1)
- Simulation Studies (1)
- Soil microbial community (1)
- Soil parameterization (1)
- Soil texture (1)
- Sozialarbeit (1)
- Sozialarbeitsforschung (1)
- Soziale Arbeit (1)
- Soziale Bewegungen (1)
- Sozialpädagogik (1)
- Spatial autocorrelation (1)
- Stadtplanung (1)
- Stagnosols (1)
- Statistical Properties (1)
- Strategische Planung (1)
- Stratified sampling (1)
- Stress (1)
- Stresstest (1)
- Studentenbewegung (1)
- Subset Selection (1)
- Suisse (1)
- Survey statistics (1)
- TSST-VR (1)
- Theatre (1)
- Theorie (1)
- Therapeut (1)
- Therapie (1)
- Therapieerfolg (1)
- Thermalluftbild (1)
- Travailleurs frontaliers (1)
- Trier (1)
- Trier Social Stress Test (1)
- UAV (1)
- Unternehmensgründung (1)
- Unternehmenskauf (1)
- Upanischaden/Oupnek'hat (1)
- Venture Capital (VC) (1)
- Verfassungsgerichtsbarkeit (1)
- Verfassungsrecht (1)
- Vergangenheitsbewältigung (1)
- Verstärkung (1)
- Verzerrung (1)
- Virtual Reality (1)
- Virtuelle Realität (1)
- Wald (1)
- Wasserbilanz (1)
- Wasserstress (1)
- Water Framework Directive (1)
- Water balance simulation (1)
- Weinbau (1)
- Werner, Joseph (1)
- Wohnungsmarkt (1)
- Working memory (1)
- Wärmeanomalie (1)
- acquisition (1)
- behavioral genetics (1)
- biodiversity (1)
- choice-based conjoint analysis (1)
- cluster analysis (1)
- competitive analysis (1)
- conseil de coopération (1)
- crop stress (1)
- decision making pattern (1)
- deutsche Künstler (1)
- docial movements (1)
- docial work (1)
- drought (1)
- emissivity (1)
- empirical taxonomy (1)
- eukaryotes (1)
- evapotranspiration (ET) modeling (1)
- family business (1)
- family management (1)
- fiktionale Darstellung (1)
- finite element method (1)
- fractional Poisson equation (1)
- frontière (1)
- generational stage (1)
- geometric (1)
- grenzüberschreitende Kooperation (1)
- grenzüberschreitende Raumplanung (1)
- history (1)
- ice shelves (1)
- indische Philosophie (1)
- katabatic winds (1)
- local limit (1)
- local wastewater planning (1)
- long DNA barcodes (1)
- lutherische Kirche (1)
- metabarcoding (1)
- mobilité (1)
- multilevel Toeplitz (1)
- multilinear algebra (1)
- multispectral (1)
- non-family business (1)
- nonlinear optimization (1)
- numerical analysis (1)
- physiological parameters (1)
- plant adaptation mechanisms (1)
- politischer Unterricht (1)
- pre-acquisition phase (1)
- professionalisation of social work (1)
- pôles d’emploi transfrontaliers (1)
- remote sensing (1)
- ribosomal (1)
- shape optimization (1)
- social work research (1)
- soil microbial activity (1)
- soil microbial biomass (1)
- soziodemografische Faktoren (1)
- strategic acquisition (1)
- stress (1)
- target screening and selection (1)
- temperature (1)
- tensor methods (1)
- thermal infrared (TIR) (1)
- transgenerational intention (1)
- urban and rural boundaries (1)
- viticulture (1)
- water stress (1)
- water use (1)
- waterlogging (1)
- weighting (1)
Institut
- Politikwissenschaft (27)
- Fachbereich 4 (13)
- Fachbereich 3 (9)
- Fachbereich 1 (7)
- Raum- und Umweltwissenschaften (6)
- Fachbereich 6 (4)
- Fachbereich 2 (2)
- Fachbereich 5 (1)
- Mathematik (1)
- Servicezentrum eSciences (1)
Harvesting of silage maize in late autumn on waterlogged soils may result in several ecological problems such as soil compaction and may subsequently be a major threat to soil fertility in Europe. It was hypothesized that perennial energy crops might reduce the vulnerability for soil compaction through earlier harvest dates and improved soil stability. However, the performance of such crops to be grown on soil that are periodically waterlogged and implications for soil chemical and microbial properties are currently an open issue. Within the framework of a two-year pot experiment we investigated the potential of the cup plant (Silphium perfoliatum L.), Jerusalem artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus), giant knotweed (Fallopia japonicum X bohemica), tall wheatgrass (Agropyron elongatum), and reed canary grass (Phalaris arundinacea) for cultivation under periodically waterlogged soil conditions during the winter half year and implications for soil chemical and biological properties. Examined perennial energy crops coped with periodical waterlogging and showed yields 50% to 150% higher than in the control which was never faced with waterlogging. Root formation was similar in waterlogged and non-waterlogged soil layers. Soil chemical and microbial properties clearly responded to different soil moisture treatments. For example, dehydrogenase activity was two to four times higher in the periodically waterlogged treatment compared to the control. Despite waterlogging, aerobic microbial activity was significantly elevated indicating morphological and metabolic adaptation of the perennial crops to withstand waterlogged conditions. Thus, our results reveal first evidence of a site-adapted biomass production on periodical waterlogged soils through the cultivation of perennial energy crops and for intense plant microbe interactions.
We consider a linear regression model for which we assume that some of the observed variables are irrelevant for the prediction. Including the wrong variables in the statistical model can either lead to the problem of having too little information to properly estimate the statistic of interest, or having too much information and consequently describing fictitious connections. This thesis considers discrete optimization to conduct a variable selection. In light of this, the subset selection regression method is analyzed. The approach gained a lot of interest in recent years due to its promising predictive performance. A major challenge associated with the subset selection regression is the computational difficulty. In this thesis, we propose several improvements for the efficiency of the method. Novel bounds on the coefficients of the subset selection regression are developed, which help to tighten the relaxation of the associated mixed-integer program, which relies on a Big-M formulation. Moreover, a novel mixed-integer linear formulation for the subset selection regression based on a bilevel optimization reformulation is proposed. Finally, it is shown that the perspective formulation of the subset selection regression is equivalent to a state-of-the-art binary formulation. We use this insight to develop novel bounds for the subset selection regression problem, which show to be highly effective in combination with the proposed linear formulation.
In the second part of this thesis, we examine the statistical conception of the subset selection regression and conclude that it is misaligned with its intention. The subset selection regression uses the training error to decide on which variables to select. The approach conducts the validation on the training data, which oftentimes is not a good estimate of the prediction error. Hence, it requires a predetermined cardinality bound. Instead, we propose to select variables with respect to the cross-validation value. The process is formulated as a mixed-integer program with the sparsity becoming subject of the optimization. Usually, a cross-validation is used to select the best model out of a few options. With the proposed program the best model out of all possible models is selected. Since the cross-validation is a much better estimate of the prediction error, the model can select the best sparsity itself.
The thesis is concluded with an extensive simulation study which provides evidence that discrete optimization can be used to produce highly valuable predictive models with the cross-validation subset selection regression almost always producing the best results.
Abstract: Thermal infrared (TIR) multi-/hyperspectral and sun-induced fluorescence (SIF) approaches together with classic solar-reflective (visible, near-, and shortwave infrared reflectance (VNIR)/SWIR) hyperspectral remote sensing form the latest state-of-the-art techniques for the detection of crop water stress. Each of these three domains requires dedicated sensor technology currently in place for ground and airborne applications and either have satellite concepts under development (e.g., HySPIRI/SBG (Surface Biology and Geology), Sentinel-8, HiTeSEM in the TIR) or are subject to satellite missions recently launched or scheduled within the next years (i.e., EnMAP and PRISMA (PRecursore IperSpettrale della Missione Applicativa, launched on March 2019) in the VNIR/SWIR, Fluorescence Explorer (FLEX) in the SIF). Identification of plant water stress or drought is of utmost importance to guarantee global water and food supply. Therefore, knowledge of crop water status over large farmland areas bears large potential for optimizing agricultural water use. As plant responses to water stress are numerous and complex, their physiological consequences affect the electromagnetic signal in different spectral domains. This review paper summarizes the importance of water stress-related applications and the plant responses to water stress, followed by a concise review of water-stress detection through remote sensing, focusing on TIR without neglecting the comparison to other spectral domains (i.e., VNIR/SWIR and SIF) and multi-sensor approaches. Current and planned sensors at ground, airborne, and satellite level for the TIR as well as a selection of commonly used indices and approaches for water-stress detection using the main multi-/hyperspectral remote sensing imaging techniques are reviewed. Several important challenges are discussed that occur when using spectral emissivity, temperature-based indices, and physically-based approaches for water-stress detection in the TIR spectral domain. Furthermore, challenges with data processing and the perspectives for future satellite missions in the TIR are critically examined. In conclusion, information from multi-/hyperspectral TIR together with those from VNIR/SWIR and SIF sensors within a multi-sensor approach can provide profound insights to actual plant (water) status and the rationale of physiological and biochemical changes. Synergistic sensor use will open new avenues for scientists to study plant functioning and the response to environmental stress in a wide range of ecosystems.
Competitive analysis is a well known method for analyzing online algorithms.
Two online optimization problems, the scheduling problems and the list accessing problems, are considered in the thesis of Yida Zhu in the respect of this method.
For both problems, several existing online and offline algorithms are studied. Their performances are compared with the performances of corresponding offline optimal algorithms.
In particular, the list accessing algorithm BIT is carefully reviewed.
The classical proof of its worst case performance get simplified by adapting the knowledge about the optimal offline algorithm.
With regard to average case analysis, a new closed formula is developed to determine the performance of BIT on specific class of instances.
All algorithm considered in this thesis are also implemented in Julia.
Their empirical performances are studied and compared with each other directly.
This dissertation deals with consistent estimates in household surveys. Household surveys are often drawn via cluster sampling, with households sampled at the first stage and persons selected at the second stage. The collected data provide information for estimation at both the person and the household level. However, consistent estimates are desirable in the sense that the estimated household-level totals should coincide with the estimated totals obtained at the person-level. Current practice in statistical offices is to use integrated weighting. In this approach consistent estimates are guaranteed by equal weights for all persons within a household and the household itself. However, due to the forced equality of weights, the individual patterns of persons are lost and the heterogeneity within households is not taken into account. In order to avoid the negative consequences of integrated weighting, we propose alternative weighting methods in the first part of this dissertation that ensure both consistent estimates and individual person weights within a household. The underlying idea is to limit the consistency conditions to variables that emerge in both the personal and household data sets. These common variables are included in the person- and household-level estimator as additional auxiliary variables. This achieves consistency more directly and only for the relevant variables, rather than indirectly by forcing equal weights on all persons within a household. Further decisive advantages of the proposed alternative weighting methods are that original individual rather than the constructed aggregated auxiliaries are utilized and that the variable selection process is more flexible because different auxiliary variables can be incorporated in the person-level estimator than in the household-level estimator.
In the second part of this dissertation, the variances of a person-level GREG estimator and an integrated estimator are compared in order to quantify the effects of the consistency requirements in the integrated weighting approach. One of the challenges is that the estimators to be compared are of different dimensions. The proposed solution is to decompose the variance of the integrated estimator into the variance of a reduced GREG estimator, whose underlying model is of the same dimensions as the person-level GREG estimator, and add a constructed term that captures the effects disregarded by the reduced model. Subsequently, further fields of application for the derived decomposition are proposed such as the variable selection process in the field of econometrics or survey statistics.
Many combinatorial optimization problems on finite graphs can be formulated as conic convex programs, e.g. the stable set problem, the maximum clique problem or the maximum cut problem. Especially NP-hard problems can be written as copositive programs. In this case the complexity is moved entirely into the copositivity constraint.
Copositive programming is a quite new topic in optimization. It deals with optimization over the so-called copositive cone, a superset of the positive semidefinite cone, where the quadratic form x^T Ax has to be nonnegative for only the nonnegative vectors x. Its dual cone is the cone of completely positive matrices, which includes all matrices that can be decomposed as a sum of nonnegative symmetric vector-vector-products.
The related optimization problems are linear programs with matrix variables and cone constraints.
However, some optimization problems can be formulated as combinatorial problems on infinite graphs. For example, the kissing number problem can be formulated as a stable set problem on a circle.
In this thesis we will discuss how the theory of copositive optimization can be lifted up to infinite dimension. For some special cases we will give applications in combinatorial optimization.
La participation des élèves ne devrait pas se limiter à l’implication dans l’organisation et l’évaluation des cours. Une culture de tâches participative offre de nombreuses possibilités pour pratiquer et analyser la participation démocratique à l’aide d’actions réelles ou simulées dans l’apprentissage technique.
Le feedback à l’école ? Il s’agit souvent d’un simple retour d’informations des enseignant(e)s sur le travail des élèves en classe. Cependant, une culture du feedback solide en classe offre de nombreuses possibilités pour pratiquer l’action démocratique et améliorer la qualité de l’enseignement, tout en faisant participer enseignant(e)s et apprenant(e)s.
Thema dieser Dissertation ist das deutsche Selbstbildnis im 17. Jahrhundert. Ziel der Arbeit war es, das deutsche Selbstbildnis als eigene Gattung zu etablieren. Hierzu wurden die Selbstbildnisse deutscher Maler des 17. Jahrhunderts ausgewählt, gilt doch diese Zeit noch immer als ‚totes Jahrhundert‘. Grundlage der Untersuchung war eine Sammlung von 148 Objekten, die einer grundlegenden Analyse unterzogen wurden. Das früheste Selbstbildnis in dieser Sammlung stammt von 1600, das späteste wurde um 1700 angefertigt. Künstler aus dem gesamten Alten Reich, ob aus Schlesien und Böhmen, Nord-oder Süddeutschland oder aus den österreichischen wie schweizerischen Landen sind hier vertreten. Die Selbstbildnisse stammen von Malern in der gesamten breite ihrer Karriere. So sind gleichermaßen Selbstbildnisse von Gesellen wie Meistern, von Hofmalern bis hin zu Freimeistern vertreten. Besonders wichtig war es, nicht nur Selbstbildnisse im Gemälde oder Kupferstich in die Untersuchung aufzunehmen, sondern auch Stammbucheinträge.
Die ausführliche Betrachtung und Gegenüberstellung der deutschen Selbstbildnisse mit denen ihrer europäischen Kollegen hat gezeigt, dass auch deutsche Maler den gängigen Darstellungstypen wie etwa dem virtuoso folgten. Aber die deutschen Maler imitierten nicht nur, sondern experimentierten und gingen mit ihren Vorbildern spielerisch um. Daneben folgten sie natürlich auch den Trends der Selbstinszenierung. Sie drückten in ihren Selbstbildnissen ihren Wunsch nach sozialer und gesellschaftlicher Emanzipation des gesamten Berufsstandes aus. So war das deutsche Selbstbildnis eigenständiger Ausdruck des Aufbruches deutscher Künstler in eine neue Zeit.
This dissertation investigates corporate acquisition decisions that represent important corporate development activities for family and non-family firms. The main research objective of this dissertation is to generate insights into the subjective decision-making behavior of corporate decision-makers from family and non-family firms and their weighting of M&A decision-criteria during the early pre-acquisition target screening and selection process. The main methodology chosen for the investigation of M&A decision-making preferences and the weighting of M&A decision criteria is a choice-based conjoint analysis. The overall sample of this dissertation consists of 304 decision-makers from 264 private and public family and non-family firms from mainly Germany and the DACH-region. In the first empirical part of the dissertation, the relative importance of strategic, organizational and financial M&A decision-criteria for corporate acquirers in acquisition target screening is investigated. In addition, the author uses a cluster analysis to explore whether distinct decision-making patterns exist in acquisition target screening. In the second empirical part, the dissertation explores whether there are differences in investment preferences in acquisition target screening between family and non-family firms and within the group of family firms. With regards to the heterogeneity of family firms, the dissertation generated insights into how family-firm specific characteristics like family management, the generational stage of the firm and non-economic goals such as transgenerational control intention influences the weighting of different M&A decision criteria in acquisition target screening. The dissertation contributes to strategic management research, in specific to M&A literature, and to family business research. The results of this dissertation generate insights into the weighting of M&A decision-making criteria and facilitate a better understanding of corporate M&A decisions in family and non-family firms. The findings show that decision-making preferences (hence the weighting of M&A decision criteria) are influenced by characteristics of the individual decision-maker, the firm and the environment in which the firm operates.