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Donnerstag, 21. Januar 2021, 11:30 Uhr

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Freitag, 29. Januar 2021, 11:30 Uhr

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Vortragende(r) Nico Denner
Titel Theory-Guided Data Science for Lithium-Ion Battery Modeling
Vortragstyp Proposal
Betreuer(in) Pawel Bielski
Vortragsmodus
Kurzfassung Lithium-ion batteries are driving innovation in the evolution of electromobility and renewable energy. These complex, dynamic systems require reliable and accurate monitoring through Battery Management Systems to ensure the safety and longevity of battery cells. Therefore an accurate prediction of the battery voltage is essential which is currently realized by so-called Equivalent Circuit (EC) Models.

Although state-of-the-art approaches deliver good results, they are hard to train due to the high number of variables, lacking the ability to generalize, and need to make many simplifying assumptions. In contrast to theory-based models, purely data-driven approaches require large datasets and are often unable to produce physically consistent results. Theory-Guided Data Science (TGDS) aims at using scientific knowledge to improve the effectiveness of Data Science models in scientific discovery. This concept has been very successful in several domains including climate science and material research.

Our work is the first one to apply TGDS to battery systems by working together closely with domain experts. We compare the performance of different TGDS approaches against each other as well as against the two baselines using only theory-based EC-Models and black-box Machine Learning models.

Freitag, 29. Januar 2021, 14:00 Uhr

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Vortragende(r) Thomas Lieb
Titel Automatic Context-Based Policy Generation from Usage- and Misusage-Diagrams
Vortragstyp Masterarbeit
Betreuer(in) Maximilian Walter
Vortragsmodus
Kurzfassung In systems with a very dynamic process like Industry 4.0, contexts of all

participating entities often change and a lot of data exchange happens with external organizations such as suppliers or producers which brings concern about unauthorized data access. This creates the need for access control systems to be able to handle such a combination of a highly dynamic system and the arising concern about the security of data. In many situations the decision for access control depends on the context information of the requester. Another problem of dynamic system is that the manual development of access policies can be time consuming and expensive. Approaches using automated policy generation have shown to reduce this effort. In this master thesis we introduce a concept which combines context based model-driven security with automated policy generation and evaluate if it is a suitable option for the creation of access control systems and if it can reduce the effort in policy generation. The approach makes use of usage and misusage diagrams which are on a high architectural abstraction level to derive and combine access policies for data elements which are located on a lower abstraction level.

Vortragende(r) Erik Weinstock
Titel Traceability of Telemetry Data in Hybrid Architectures
Vortragstyp Masterarbeit
Betreuer(in) Robert Heinrich
Vortragsmodus
Kurzfassung With the rise of Software-as-a-Service products, the software development landscape transformed to a more agile and data-driven environment. The amount of telemetry data, collected from the users actions, is rapidly increasing and with it the possibilities but also the challenges of using the collected data for quality improvement purposes.

LogMeIn Inc. is a global company offering Software-as-a-Service solutions for remote collaboration and IT management. An example product is GoToMeeting which allows to create and join virtual meeting rooms.

This Master’s Thesis presents the JoinTracer approach which enables the telemetry-data-based traceability of GoToMeeting join-flows of the GoToMeeting architecture. The approach combines new mechanics and already existing traceability techniques from different traceability communities to leverage synergies and to enable the traceability of individual join-flows. In this work, the JoinTracer approach is designed and implemented as well as evaluated regarding the functionality, performance and acceptance. The results are discussed to analyze the future development and the applicability of this approach to other contexts as well.

Freitag, 5. Februar 2021, 11:30 Uhr

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Vortragende(r) Florian Leiser
Titel Modeling Dynamic Systems using Slope Constraints: An Application Analysis of Gas Turbines
Vortragstyp Proposal
Betreuer(in) Pawel Bielski
Vortragsmodus
Kurzfassung In energy studies, researchers build models for dynamic systems to predict the produced electrical output precisely. Since experiments are expensive, the researchers rely on simulations of surrogate models. These models use differential equations that can provide decent results but are computationally expensive. Further, transition phases, which occur when an input change results in a delayed change in output, are modeled individually and therefore lacking generalizability.

Current research includes Data Science approaches that need large amounts of data, which are costly when performing scientific experiments. Theory-Guided Data Science aims to combine Data Science approaches with domain knowledge to reduce the amount of data needed while predicting the output precisely.

However, even state-of-the-art Theory-Guided Data Science approaches lack the possibility to model the slopes occuring in the transition phases. In this thesis we aim to close this gap by proposing a new loss constraint that represents both transition and stationary phases. Our method is compared with theoretical and Data Science approaches on synthetic and real world data.

Freitag, 12. Februar 2021, 11:30 Uhr

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Vortragende(r) Tom George
Titel Monitoring Complex Systems with Domain Knowledge: Adapting Contextual Bandits to Tracing Data
Vortragstyp Proposal
Betreuer(in) Pawel Bielski
Vortragsmodus
Kurzfassung Monitoring in complex computing systems is crucial to detect malicious states or errors in program execution. Due to the computational complexity, it is not feasible to monitor all data streams in practice. We are interested in monitoring pairs of highly correlated data streams. However we can not compute the measure of correlation for every pair of data streams at each timestep.

Picking highly correlated pairs, while exploring potentially higher correlated ones is an instance of the exploration / exploitation problem. Bandit algorithms are a family of online learning algorithms that aim to optimize sequential decision making and balance exploration and exploitation. A contextual bandit additional uses contextual information to decide better.

In our work we want to use a contextual bandit algorithm to keep an overview over highly correlated pairs of data streams. The context in our work contains information about the state of the system, given as execution traces. A key part of our work is to explore and evaluate different representations of the knowledge encapsulated in traces. Also we adapt state-of-the-art contextual bandit algorithms to the use case of correlation monitoring.