867 research outputs found
A model of contingency detection to spot tutoring behavior and respond to ostensive cues in human-robot-interaction
Lohan KS. A model of contingency detection to spot tutoring behavior and respond to ostensive cues in human-robot-interaction. Bielefeld: Universitätsbibliothek; 2011
Adaptive maternal synchrony: multimodal practices are tailored to infants' attention
Nomikou I, Lohan KS, Rohlfing K. Adaptive maternal synchrony: multimodal practices are tailored to infants' attention. Presented at the CEU Conference on Cognitive Development, Budapest, Hungary
Infants' gaze modulates maternal multimodal input: A study with 3-month-olds
Nomikou I, Lohan KS, Rohlfing K. Infants' gaze modulates maternal multimodal input: A study with 3-month-olds. Presented at the 18th Biennial International Conference on Infant Studies, Minneapolis, USA
Levels of embodiment: linguistic analyses of factors influencing hri
Fischer K, Lohan KS, Foth K. Levels of embodiment: linguistic analyses of factors influencing hri. In: Proceedings. 2012 7th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI 2012). Piscataway, NJ: IEEE; 2012: 463-470
High-resolution spectroscopy of gaseous 83m Kr conversion electrons with the KATRIN experiment
© 2020 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd. In this work, we present the first spectroscopic measurements of conversion electrons originating from the decay of metastable gaseous 83mKr with the Karlsruhe Tritium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment. The obtained results represent one of the major commissioning milestones for the subsequent direct neutrino mass measurement with KATRIN. The successful campaign demonstrates the functionalities of the KATRIN beamline. Precise measurement of the narrow K-32, L3-32, and N2,3-32 conversion electron lines allowed to verify the eV-scale energy resolution of the KATRIN main spectrometer necessary for competitive measurement of the absolute neutrino mass scale
High-resolution spectroscopy of gaseous 83m Kr conversion electrons with the KATRIN experiment
© 2020 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd. In this work, we present the first spectroscopic measurements of conversion electrons originating from the decay of metastable gaseous 83mKr with the Karlsruhe Tritium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment. The obtained results represent one of the major commissioning milestones for the subsequent direct neutrino mass measurement with KATRIN. The successful campaign demonstrates the functionalities of the KATRIN beamline. Precise measurement of the narrow K-32, L3-32, and N2,3-32 conversion electron lines allowed to verify the eV-scale energy resolution of the KATRIN main spectrometer necessary for competitive measurement of the absolute neutrino mass scale
Which Motionese Parameters Change with Children’s Age?
Vollmer A-L, Lohan KS, Fritsch J, Wrede B, Rohlfing K. Which Motionese Parameters Change with Children’s Age
KATRIN: Status and Prospects for the Neutrino Mass and Beyond
The Karlsruhe Tritium Neutrino (KATRIN) experiment is designed to measure a
high-precision integral spectrum of the endpoint region of T2 beta decay, with
the primary goal of probing the absolute mass scale of the neutrino. After a
first tritium commissioning campaign in 2018, the experiment has been regularly
running since 2019, and in its first two measurement campaigns has already
achieved a sub-eV sensitivity. After 1000 days of data-taking, KATRIN's design
sensitivity is 0.2 eV at the 90% confidence level. In this white paper we
describe the current status of KATRIN; explore prospects for measuring the
neutrino mass and other physics observables, including sterile neutrinos and
other beyond-Standard-Model hypotheses; and discuss research-and-development
projects that may further improve the KATRIN sensitivity.Comment: Contribution to Snowmass 2021. 70 pages excluding references; 35
figures. Author list updated June 202
Contingency allows the robot to spot the tutor and to learn from interaction
Lohan KS, Pitsch K, Rohlfing K, et al. Contingency allows the robot to spot the tutor and to learn from interaction. In: 2011 IEEE International Conference on Development and Learning (ICDL 2011). Piscataway, NJ: IEEE; 2011: 1-8
The haunted public sphere: women and the power of emotion in the works of Alexander Kluge and the films of the Berlin School
My dissertation sheds light on the German filmmaker and author Alexander Kluge and his ideas on filmmaking as they evolved out of his conception of the public versus the private spheres since the early 1960s. It was Kluge’s contention that personal experiences of war and violence could not be expressed publicly in the postwar Federal Republic, causing a rift between the two realms and a haunting presence of trauma within individuals and society as a whole. What Kluge, in cooperation with Oskar Negt, called “alternative public sphere” in Public Sphere and Experience (1972) and History and Obstinacy (1981) is closely linked to Woman and so-called “proletarian” forces countering instrumental reason and the bourgeois cultural matrix. Analyzing four crucial films from Kluge’s creative work, I outline the increasingly allegorical role of his concept of “female mode of production,” which constitutes Kluge’s aesthetics and thematic focus. How the ideas of “alternative public sphere” and “female mode of production” are linked to the cinema and Kluge’s theory of film is the focus of another chapter that scrutinizes Kluge’s recent literary compilation Cinema Stories (2007). Finally, I read a selection of contemporary German films considered the new filmic avant-garde through the lens of Kluge’s approach to film, to the “female mode of production,” and to the public sphere. This allows me to compare the ethics, the formal and political attitude of the so-called Berlin School directors to the vanguard movement of Young German Film in the sixties and early seventies. I conclude that the filmic Autoren today deal with a similar problem as Alexander Kluge has done throughout his career, namely the dissociation of personal, lived experience from public representation. They also employ formal and thematic strategies that can be related to the thoughts behind the Oberhausen generation of German filmmakers. While the generation of the leftist student movements sought public recognition of the atrocities committed under National Socialism, the Berlin School directors deal with mediated experience in times of media and finance corporatism as virtual realities threaten to take over the empiric world.Ph. D.Includes bibliographical referencesby Katrin Polak-Springe
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