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Spinodal Zr0.4Hf0.6Ni1.15Sn half-Heusler thermoelectrics are synthesized and aged. The complex microstructure due to the spinodal decomposition is investigated by powder X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscope (SEM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM). By Rietveld refinements, it is confirmed that excess Ni atoms in the arc-melted and spark-plasma-sintered half-Heusler matrix prefer to form nanoscale/ submicron Heusler precipitates via spinodal decomposition and growth during the aging at 1173 K. Such phase separation changes the band gap of semiconductors, reduces the thermal conductivity drastically and improves the performance of thermoelectrics. As a result, a more than 50 % improvement of the ZT value on the unaged specimens was achieved.
Initial results of an ongoing research in the field of reactive mobile autonomy are presented. The aim is to create a reactive obstacle avoidance method for mobile agent operating in dynamic, unstructured, and unpredictable environment. The method is inspired by the stimulus-response behavior of simple animals. An obstacle avoidance controller is developed that uses raw visual information of the environment. It employs reinforcement learning and is therefore capable of self-developing. This should result with obstacle avoidance behavior that is adaptable and therefore generalizes on various operational modalities. The general assumptions of the agent capabilities, the features of the environment as well as the initial result of the simulation are presented. The plans for improvement and suitable performance evaluation are suggested.
An architectural concept for implementing the socio-technical workflow of Digital Pathology in Chile
(2014)
Virtual Microscopy opens up the possibility to remotely access high quality images at large scales for scientific research, education, and clinical application. For clinical diagnostics, Digital Pathology (DP) presents a novel opportunity to reduce variability [Bauer et al., 2013] due to the reproducible access to Whole Slide Imaging, quantitative parameters (e.g. HER2 stained membrane) [Al-Janabi et al., 2012], second opinion and Quality Assurance [Ho et al., 2013]. Despite of the mentioned advantages, the challenge remains to incorporate DP into the pathologists workflow within a heterogeneous environment of systems and infrastructures [Stathonikos
et al., 2013]. Different issues must be solved in order to optimize the impact of DP in the daily clinical practice [Daniel et al., 2012] [Ho et al., 2006]. The integration needs precise planning and comprehensive evaluation for adopting this technology
[Stathonikos et al., 2013]. This thesis will focus on an organizational development approach based on a Socio-Technical System (STS). The socio-technical approach covers: (i) the technical issue: tissue-scanner, NDP.view, NDP.serve, analysis software, and (ii) the social issue: pathologists, technicians. In order to improve the integration, a joint optimization (of i and ii) is necessary. The developed STS approach will optimize the integration of DP towards improved workflows in clinical environments. The improved workflows will reduce the pathologists turnaround time, improve the certainty of the diagnostics, and provide a more effective patient care within the covered institutions. An overt multi-site Participatory Observation, Questionnaires, and Business Process Modelling Notation will be used to analyse the existing pathological workflows. Based on this, the system will be modelled with the 3lgm2 Toolkit [Winter et al., 2007] under consideration of various technical subsystems that are present in the clinical environment. Afterwards, the interfaces between subsystems and its possible interoperabilities will be evaluated, taking into account the different existing standards and guidelines for image processing and management, as well as business processes in DP. In order to analyse the existing preconditions a questionnaire will be evaluated to establish a robust and valid view. In addition, the overt participatory observation will support this elevation, giving a deeper insight on the social part. This observation also covers the technical side including the whole pathological process. The socio technical model will then reveal measurable potential for optimization with incorporated DP (e.g. higher throughput for slides). The organizational development approach consists of a Socio-Technical System based on overt multi-site participatory observations, questionnaires, business process modelling and 3LGM2, will optimize the use of Digital Pathology in the daily clinical practice and raise the acceptance to incorporate integrate the new technology within the dayly workflow through the user centred process of incorporation.
• Perform and evaluate a questionnaire and a participant observation of pathologists work days in private & public institutions
• Create and evaluate a 3lgm2 model
• Model the current pathological process (viewpoint of pathologist & technical assistant) & perform and evaluate a contextual inquiry to elevate the pathologists requirements & expectations towards the system
• Test the future WF according the model parameters.
This project will detect unsuspected interrelations and interdependencies within the socio- technical workflow with a pathology laboratory. The observation will reveal the action conformity as well as the environment in which the process has to be embedded. Furthermore it will establish an optimized workflow for a specific clinical environment to prepare the implementation of DP. Additionally it will be possible to
quantify digitized images in order to improve decision making and lastly to improve patient care. In the future it will be possible to extend automated image analysis in order to support clinical decision support. Depending on acceptance, this can lead towards an automated clinical decision support for cases with low complexity.
The aim of this master’s thesis is the design and implementation of a dedicated software system, for planning and implementation of occupational therapy intervention and research studies, in a driving simulator environment. In the first part, the concept based on user requirements is presented. It consists of architectural patterns and guidelines with the main focus on utility and application security. The result of this part is the design of a web application which supports integration in a clinical as well as a research environment. The second part presents the reference implementation of the previously introduced concept. It was developed under a case study in a research facility which hosts a driving simulator. A close cooperation and the influence the researcher’s experience led into a product which provides advanced usability for the target users. In conclusion, the thesis validated the concept indirectly under a testing phase of the reference implementation. It provides the base for a follow-up project to refine the software product and extend the concept to different fields of application.
The Greifswald University Hospital in Germany conducts a research project called "Greifswald Approach to Individualized Medicine (GANI_MED)", which aims at improving patient care through personalized medicine. As a result of this project, there are multiple regional patient cohorts set up for different common diseases. The collected data of these cohorts will act as a resource for epidemiological research. Researchers are going to get the possibility to use this data for their study, by utilizing a variety of different descriptive metadata attributes. The actual medical datasets of the patients are integrated from multiple clinical information systems and medical devices. Yet, at this point in the process of defining a research query, researchers do not have proper tools to query for existing patient data. There are no tools available which offer a metadata catalogue that is linked to observational data, which would allow convenient research. Instead, researchers have to issue an application for selected variables that fit the conditions of their study, and wait for the results. That leaves the researchers not knowing in advance, whether there are enough (or any) patients fitting the specified inclusion and exclusion criteria. The "Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside (i2b2)" framework has been assessed and implemented as a prototypical evaluation instance for solving this issue. i2b2 will be set up at the Institute for Community Medicine (ICM) at Greifswald, in order to act as a preliminary query tool for researchers. As a result, the development of a research data import routine and customizations of the i2b2 webclient were successfully performed. An important part of the solution is, that the metadata import can adapt to changes in the metadata. New metadata items can be added without changing the import program. The results of this work are discussed and a further outlook is described in this thesis.