1,467 research outputs found

    What Do We Want From Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI)? -- A Stakeholder Perspective on XAI and a Conceptual Model Guiding Interdisciplinary XAI Research

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    Previous research in Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI) suggests that a main aim of explainability approaches is to satisfy specific interests, goals, expectations, needs, and demands regarding artificial systems (we call these stakeholders' desiderata) in a variety of contexts. However, the literature on XAI is vast, spreads out across multiple largely disconnected disciplines, and it often remains unclear how explainability approaches are supposed to achieve the goal of satisfying stakeholders' desiderata. This paper discusses the main classes of stakeholders calling for explainability of artificial systems and reviews their desiderata. We provide a model that explicitly spells out the main concepts and relations necessary to consider and investigate when evaluating, adjusting, choosing, and developing explainability approaches that aim to satisfy stakeholders' desiderata. This model can serve researchers from the variety of different disciplines involved in XAI as a common ground. It emphasizes where there is interdisciplinary potential in the evaluation and the development of explainability approaches.Comment: 57 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, to be published in Artificial Intelligence, Markus Langer, Daniel Oster and Timo Speith share first-authorship of this pape

    Corporate Smart Content Evaluation

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    Nowadays, a wide range of information sources are available due to the evolution of web and collection of data. Plenty of these information are consumable and usable by humans but not understandable and processable by machines. Some data may be directly accessible in web pages or via data feeds, but most of the meaningful existing data is hidden within deep web databases and enterprise information systems. Besides the inability to access a wide range of data, manual processing by humans is effortful, error-prone and not contemporary any more. Semantic web technologies deliver capabilities for machine-readable, exchangeable content and metadata for automatic processing of content. The enrichment of heterogeneous data with background knowledge described in ontologies induces re-usability and supports automatic processing of data. The establishment of “Corporate Smart Content” (CSC) - semantically enriched data with high information content with sufficient benefits in economic areas - is the main focus of this study. We describe three actual research areas in the field of CSC concerning scenarios and datasets applicable for corporate applications, algorithms and research. Aspect- oriented Ontology Development advances modular ontology development and partial reuse of existing ontological knowledge. Complex Entity Recognition enhances traditional entity recognition techniques to recognize clusters of related textual information about entities. Semantic Pattern Mining combines semantic web technologies with pattern learning to mine for complex models by attaching background knowledge. This study introduces the afore-mentioned topics by analyzing applicable scenarios with economic and industrial focus, as well as research emphasis. Furthermore, a collection of existing datasets for the given areas of interest is presented and evaluated. The target audience includes researchers and developers of CSC technologies - people interested in semantic web features, ontology development, automation, extracting and mining valuable information in corporate environments. The aim of this study is to provide a comprehensive and broad overview over the three topics, give assistance for decision making in interesting scenarios and choosing practical datasets for evaluating custom problem statements. Detailed descriptions about attributes and metadata of the datasets should serve as starting point for individual ideas and approaches

    Digital Traces of the Mind::Using Smartphones to Capture Signals of Well-Being in Individuals

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    General context and questions Adolescents and young adults typically use their smartphone several hours a day. Although there are concerns about how such behaviour might affect their well-being, the popularity of these powerful devices also opens novel opportunities for monitoring well-being in daily life. If successful, monitoring well-being in daily life provides novel opportunities to develop future interventions that provide personalized support to individuals at the moment they require it (just-in-time adaptive interventions). Taking an interdisciplinary approach with insights from communication, computational, and psychological science, this dissertation investigated the relation between smartphone app use and well-being and developed machine learning models to estimate an individual’s well-being based on how they interact with their smartphone. To elucidate the relation between smartphone trace data and well-being and to contribute to the development of technologies for monitoring well-being in future clinical practice, this dissertation addressed two overarching questions:RQ1: Can we find empirical support for theoretically motivated relations between smartphone trace data and well-being in individuals? RQ2: Can we use smartphone trace data to monitor well-being in individuals?Aims The first aim of this dissertation was to quantify the relation between the collected smartphone trace data and momentary well-being at the sample level, but also for each individual, following recent conceptual insights and empirical findings in psychological, communication, and computational science. A strength of this personalized (or idiographic) approach is that it allows us to capture how individuals might differ in how smartphone app use is related to their well-being. Considering such interindividual differences is important to determine if some individuals might potentially benefit from spending more time on their smartphone apps whereas others do not or even experience adverse effects. The second aim of this dissertation was to develop models for monitoring well-being in daily life. The present work pursued this transdisciplinary aim by taking a machine learning approach and evaluating to what extent we might estimate an individual’s well-being based on their smartphone trace data. If such traces can be used for this purpose by helping to pinpoint when individuals are unwell, they might be a useful data source for developing future interventions that provide personalized support to individuals at the moment they require it (just-in-time adaptive interventions). With this aim, the dissertation follows current developments in psychoinformatics and psychiatry, where much research resources are invested in using smartphone traces and similar data (obtained with smartphone sensors and wearables) to develop technologies for detecting whether an individual is currently unwell or will be in the future. Data collection and analysis This work combined novel data collection techniques (digital phenotyping and experience sampling methodology) for measuring smartphone use and well-being in the daily lives of 247 student participants. For a period up to four months, a dedicated application installed on participants’ smartphones collected smartphone trace data. In the same time period, participants completed a brief smartphone-based well-being survey five times a day (for 30 days in the first month and 30 days in the fourth month; up to 300 assessments in total). At each measurement, this survey comprised questions about the participants’ momentary level of procrastination, stress, and fatigue, while sleep duration was measured in the morning. Taking a time-series and machine learning approach to analysing these data, I provide the following contributions: Chapter 2 investigates the person-specific relation between passively logged usage of different application types and momentary subjective procrastination, Chapter 3 develops machine learning methodology to estimate sleep duration using smartphone trace data, Chapter 4 combines machine learning and explainable artificial intelligence to discover smartphone-tracked digital markers of momentary subjective stress, Chapter 5 uses a personalized machine learning approach to evaluate if smartphone trace data contains behavioral signs of fatigue. Collectively, these empirical studies provide preliminary answers to the overarching questions of this dissertation.Summary of results With respect to the theoretically motivated relations between smartphone trace data and wellbeing (RQ1), we found that different patterns in smartphone trace data, from time spent on social network, messenger, video, and game applications to smartphone-tracked sleep proxies, are related to well-being in individuals. The strength and nature of this relation depends on the individual and app usage pattern under consideration. The relation between smartphone app use patterns and well-being is limited in most individuals, but relatively strong in a minority. Whereas some individuals might benefit from using specific app types, others might experience decreases in well-being when spending more time on these apps. With respect to the question whether we might use smartphone trace data to monitor well-being in individuals (RQ2), we found that smartphone trace data might be useful for this purpose in some individuals and to some extent. They appear most relevant in the context of sleep monitoring (Chapter 3) and have the potential to be included as one of several data sources for monitoring momentary procrastination (Chapter 2), stress (Chapter 4), and fatigue (Chapter 5) in daily life. Outlook Future interdisciplinary research is needed to investigate whether the relationship between smartphone use and well-being depends on the nature of the activities performed on these devices, the content they present, and the context in which they are used. Answering these questions is essential to unravel the complex puzzle of developing technologies for monitoring well-being in daily life.<br/

    Three Research Essays on the Effects of Charity Website Design on Online Donations

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    This dissertation, which comprises three essays, examines the effects of charity website characteristics on people\u27s attitudes and online donation behaviors based on the elaboration likelihood model of persuasion (Essay 1), the halo effect (Essay 2), and self-schema, congruity, and visual rhetoric (Essay 3). Essay 1: The Elaborating Role of Personal Involvement with Charity Giving and Helper\u27s High on the Effects of Website Quality: Multiple Roles of Variables Although the Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM) has been utilized for decades, researchers have not leveraged its full capabilities and richness in understanding the multiple roles postulate and employing the central and peripheral routes to persuasion. The central theme of this study is that cues can assume multiple roles, serving as central or peripheral cues, depending on an elaboration state. Moreover, this study asserts that a variable cannot be determined as a central or peripheral cue without consisting the elaboration state and associated theoretical explanations. This study theorizes and empirically tests the multiples roles postulate in the context of charity website and online donations. Using websites as a persuasion channel, this study investigates the effects of charity website quality, consisting of information content quality and system quality, on attitude toward the charity website, which in turn influences willingness to donate to the charity website. In keeping with the multiple roles postulate, this research investigates two charity-specific motivational constructs, personal involvement with charity giving and helper\u27s high as elaboration states, proposing that people with high personal involvement are more likely to be persuaded by information content, including financial, performance, and donation information. Likewise, individuals who reflect greater helper\u27s high, will rely more on system quality characteristics (including navigability, download delay, visual aesthetics, and security) in evaluating and forming their attitudes toward the charity websites. The results of structural equation modeling supported all hypotheses. This study extends the ELM by supporting the multiple roles postulate that has not received adequate attention in prior research and introducing charity-specific elaboration motivations. Essay 2: Beautiful is Good and Good is Reputable: Multi-Attribute Charity Website Evaluation and Reputation Formation under the Halo Effect The halo effect has been extensively employed to understand how people make judgments of quality about an object. However, there is little research on how people evaluate multi-attribute objects and what types of salient halos exist in their evaluation. In addition, little research has investigated the initial reputation formation of an unknown object. Based on these two research lacuna, the purposes of this study is to identify if there are evidences of various salient halos in evaluating multi-attributes objects and to theorize initial reputation formation. To accomplish these research objectives, this study employs charity websites as a multi-attribute donation channel consisting of three dimensions of information contents (mission, financial, and donation assistance information) and four dimensions of system functionalities/features (i.e., navigability, download speed, visual aesthetics, and security). This study proposes collective halo, aesthetics halo, two-sided quality halo, quality halo, and reputation halo in the context of charity website evaluation. The results of structural equation modeling and other analyses show evidence of the proposed halos. Essay 3: The Effects of Schema Congruity and Visual Consistency on Social Judgment of Charity Websites Effectively designed websites can positively enhance the donors\u27 perceptions so as to facilitate online donations. Drawing on extensive research on self-schema, congruity, and visual rhetoric, this study examines the effects of schema congruity (SC) and visual consistency (VC) on the perceived warmth and competence of charity websites. This study theorizes schema-visual congruity, an interaction between SC and VC. Using a controlled lab experiment, this study finds significant main effects of schema congruity and visual consistency on perceived warmth and competence. Also, there is a positive interaction between SC and VC, supporting the need for schema-visual congruity as a determinant of perceived warmth and competence. Consistent with prior eCommerce and donation research, this study finds that positive perceptions of charity websites (i.e., warmth and competence) increase attitude toward donation to the website, which in turn influences donation intention

    Rethink Digital Health Innovation: Understanding Socio-Technical Interoperability as Guiding Concept

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    Diese Dissertation sucht nach einem theoretischem GrundgerĂŒst, um komplexe, digitale Gesundheitsinnovationen so zu entwickeln, dass sie bessere Erfolgsaussichten haben, auch in der alltĂ€glichen Versorgungspraxis anzukommen. Denn obwohl es weder am Bedarf von noch an Ideen fĂŒr digitale Gesundheitsinnovationen mangelt, bleibt die Flut an erfolgreich in der Praxis etablierten Lösungen leider aus. Dieser unzureichende Diffusionserfolg einer entwickelten Lösung - gern auch als Pilotitis pathologisiert - offenbart sich insbesondere dann, wenn die geplante Innovation mit grĂ¶ĂŸeren Ambitionen und KomplexitĂ€t verbunden ist. Dem geĂŒbten Kritiker werden sofort ketzerische Gegenfragen in den Sinn kommen. Beispielsweise was denn unter komplexen, digitalen Gesundheitsinnovationen verstanden werden soll und ob es ĂŒberhaupt möglich ist, eine universale Lösungsformel zu finden, die eine erfolgreiche Diffusion digitaler Gesundheitsinnovationen garantieren kann. Beide Fragen sind nicht nur berechtigt, sondern mĂŒnden letztlich auch in zwei ForschungsstrĂ€nge, welchen ich mich in dieser Dissertation explizit widme. In einem ersten Block erarbeite ich eine Abgrenzung jener digitalen Gesundheitsinnovationen, welche derzeit in Literatur und Praxis besondere Aufmerksamkeit aufgrund ihres hohen Potentials zur Versorgungsverbesserung und ihrer resultierenden KomplexitĂ€t gewidmet ist. Genauer gesagt untersuche ich dominante Zielstellungen und welche Herausforderung mit ihnen einhergehen. Innerhalb der Arbeiten in diesem Forschungsstrang kristallisieren sich vier Zielstellungen heraus: 1. die UnterstĂŒtzung kontinuierlicher, gemeinschaftlicher Versorgungsprozesse ĂŒber diverse Leistungserbringer (auch als inter-organisationale Versorgungspfade bekannt); 2. die aktive Einbeziehung der Patient:innen in ihre Versorgungsprozesse (auch als Patient Empowerment oder Patient Engagement bekannt); 3. die StĂ€rkung der sektoren-ĂŒbergreifenden Zusammenarbeit zwischen Wissenschaft und Versorgungpraxis bis hin zu lernenden Gesundheitssystemen und 4. die Etablierung daten-zentrierter Wertschöpfung fĂŒr das Gesundheitswesen aufgrund steigender bzgl. VerfĂŒgbarkeit valider Daten, neuen Verarbeitungsmethoden (Stichwort KĂŒnstliche Intelligenz) sowie den zahlreichen Nutzungsmöglichkeiten. Im Fokus dieser Dissertation stehen daher weniger die autarken, klar abgrenzbaren Innovationen (bspw. eine Symptomtagebuch-App zur Beschwerdedokumentation). Vielmehr adressiert diese Doktorarbeit jene Innovationsvorhaben, welche eine oder mehrere der o.g. Zielstellung verfolgen, ein weiteres technologisches Puzzleteil in komplexe Informationssystemlandschaften hinzufĂŒgen und somit im Zusammenspiel mit diversen weiteren IT-Systemen zur Verbesserung der Gesundheitsversorgung und/ oder ihrer Organisation beitragen. In der Auseinandersetzung mit diesen Zielstellungen und verbundenen Herausforderungen der Systementwicklung rĂŒckte das Problem fragmentierter IT-Systemlandschaften des Gesundheitswesens in den Mittelpunkt. Darunter wird der unerfreuliche Zustand verstanden, dass unterschiedliche Informations- und Anwendungssysteme nicht wie gewĂŒnscht miteinander interagieren können. So kommt es zu Unterbrechungen von InformationsflĂŒssen und Versorgungsprozessen, welche anderweitig durch fehleranfĂ€llige ZusatzaufwĂ€nde (bspw. Doppeldokumentation) aufgefangen werden mĂŒssen. Um diesen EinschrĂ€nkungen der EffektivitĂ€t und Effizienz zu begegnen, mĂŒssen eben jene IT-System-Silos abgebaut werden. Alle o.g. Zielstellungen ordnen sich dieser defragmentierenden Wirkung unter, in dem sie 1. verschiedene Leistungserbringer, 2. Versorgungsteams und Patient:innen, 3. Wissenschaft und Versorgung oder 4. diverse Datenquellen und moderne Auswertungstechnologien zusammenfĂŒhren wollen. Doch nun kommt es zu einem komplexen Ringschluss. Einerseits suchen die in dieser Arbeit thematisierten digitalen Gesundheitsinnovationen Wege zur Defragmentierung der Informationssystemlandschaften. Andererseits ist ihre eingeschrĂ€nkte Erfolgsquote u.a. in eben jener bestehenden Fragmentierung begrĂŒndet, die sie aufzulösen suchen. Mit diesem Erkenntnisgewinn eröffnet sich der zweite Forschungsstrang dieser Arbeit, der sich mit der Eigenschaft der 'InteroperabilitĂ€t' intensiv auseinandersetzt. Er untersucht, wie diese Eigenschaft eine zentrale Rolle fĂŒr Innovationsvorhaben in der Digital Health DomĂ€ne einnehmen soll. Denn InteroperabilitĂ€t beschreibt, vereinfacht ausgedrĂŒckt, die FĂ€higkeit von zwei oder mehreren Systemen miteinander gemeinsame Aufgaben zu erfĂŒllen. Sie reprĂ€sentiert somit das Kernanliegen der identifizierten Zielstellungen und ist Dreh- und Angelpunkt, wenn eine entwickelte Lösung in eine konkrete Zielumgebung integriert werden soll. Von einem technisch-dominierten Blickwinkel aus betrachtet, geht es hierbei um die GewĂ€hrleistung von validen, performanten und sicheren Kommunikationsszenarien, sodass die o.g. InformationsflussbrĂŒche zwischen technischen Teilsystemen abgebaut werden. Ein rein technisches InteroperabilitĂ€tsverstĂ€ndnis genĂŒgt jedoch nicht, um die Vielfalt an Diffusionsbarrieren von digitalen Gesundheitsinnovationen zu umfassen. Denn beispielsweise das Fehlen adĂ€quater VergĂŒtungsoptionen innerhalb der gesetzlichen Rahmenbedingungen oder eine mangelhafte PassfĂ€higkeit fĂŒr den bestimmten Versorgungsprozess sind keine rein technischen Probleme. Vielmehr kommt hier eine Grundhaltung der Wirtschaftsinformatik zum Tragen, die Informationssysteme - auch die des Gesundheitswesens - als sozio-technische Systeme begreift und dabei Technologie stets im Zusammenhang mit Menschen, die sie nutzen, von ihr beeinflusst werden oder sie organisieren, betrachtet. Soll eine digitale Gesundheitsinnovation, die einen Mehrwert gemĂ€ĂŸ der o.g. Zielstellungen verspricht, in eine existierende Informationssystemlandschaft der Gesundheitsversorgung integriert werden, so muss sie aus technischen sowie nicht-technischen Gesichtspunkten 'interoperabel' sein. Zwar ist die Notwendigkeit von InteroperabilitĂ€t in der Wissenschaft, Politik und Praxis bekannt und auch positive Bewegungen der DomĂ€ne hin zu mehr InteroperabilitĂ€t sind zu verspĂŒren. Jedoch dominiert dabei einerseits ein technisches VerstĂ€ndnis und andererseits bleibt das Potential dieser Eigenschaft als Leitmotiv fĂŒr das Innovationsmanagement bislang weitestgehend ungenutzt. An genau dieser Stelle knĂŒpft nun der Hauptbeitrag dieser Doktorarbeit an, in dem sie eine sozio-technische Konzeptualisierung und Kontextualisierung von InteroperabilitĂ€t fĂŒr kĂŒnftige digitale Gesundheitsinnovationen vorschlĂ€gt. Literatur- und expertenbasiert wird ein Rahmenwerk erarbeitet - das Digital Health Innovation Interoperability Framework - das insbesondere Innovatoren und Innovationsfördernde dabei unterstĂŒtzen soll, die Diffusionswahrscheinlichkeit in die Praxis zu erhöhen. Nun sind mit diesem Framework viele Erkenntnisse und Botschaften verbunden, die ich fĂŒr diesen Prolog wie folgt zusammenfassen möchte: 1. Um die Entwicklung digitaler Gesundheitsinnovationen bestmöglich auf eine erfolgreiche Integration in eine bestimmte Zielumgebung auszurichten, sind die Realisierung eines neuartigen Wertversprechens sowie die GewĂ€hrleistung sozio-technischer InteroperabilitĂ€t die zwei zusammenhĂ€ngenden Hauptaufgaben eines Innovationsprozesses. 2. Die GewĂ€hrleistung von InteroperabilitĂ€t ist eine aktiv zu verantwortende Managementaufgabe und wird durch projektspezifische Bedingungen sowie von externen und internen Dynamiken beeinflusst. 3. Sozio-technische InteroperabilitĂ€t im Kontext digitaler Gesundheitsinnovationen kann ĂŒber sieben, interdependente Ebenen definiert werden: Politische und regulatorische Bedingungen; Vertragsbedingungen; Versorgungs- und GeschĂ€ftsprozesse; Nutzung; Information; Anwendungen; IT-Infrastruktur. 4. Um InteroperabilitĂ€t auf jeder dieser Ebenen zu gewĂ€hrleisten, sind Strategien differenziert zu definieren, welche auf einem Kontinuum zwischen KompatibilitĂ€tsanforderungen aufseiten der Innovation und der Motivation von Anpassungen aufseiten der Zielumgebung verortet werden können. 5. Das Streben nach mehr InteroperabilitĂ€t fördert sowohl den nachhaltigen Erfolg der einzelnen digitalen Gesundheitsinnovation als auch die Defragmentierung existierender Informationssystemlandschaften und trĂ€gt somit zur Verbesserung des Gesundheitswesens bei. Zugegeben: die letzte dieser fĂŒnf Botschaften trĂ€gt eher die FĂ€rbung einer Überzeugung, als dass sie ein Ergebnis wissenschaftlicher BeweisfĂŒhrung ist. Dennoch empfinde ich diese, wenn auch persönliche Erkenntnis als Maxim der DomĂ€ne, der ich mich zugehörig fĂŒhle - der IT-Systementwicklung des Gesundheitswesens

    ERP implementation methodologies and frameworks: a literature review

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    Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) implementation is a complex and vibrant process, one that involves a combination of technological and organizational interactions. Often an ERP implementation project is the single largest IT project that an organization has ever launched and requires a mutual fit of system and organization. Also the concept of an ERP implementation supporting business processes across many different departments is not a generic, rigid and uniform concept and depends on variety of factors. As a result, the issues addressing the ERP implementation process have been one of the major concerns in industry. Therefore ERP implementation receives attention from practitioners and scholars and both, business as well as academic literature is abundant and not always very conclusive or coherent. However, research on ERP systems so far has been mainly focused on diffusion, use and impact issues. Less attention has been given to the methods used during the configuration and the implementation of ERP systems, even though they are commonly used in practice, they still remain largely unexplored and undocumented in Information Systems research. So, the academic relevance of this research is the contribution to the existing body of scientific knowledge. An annotated brief literature review is done in order to evaluate the current state of the existing academic literature. The purpose is to present a systematic overview of relevant ERP implementation methodologies and frameworks as a desire for achieving a better taxonomy of ERP implementation methodologies. This paper is useful to researchers who are interested in ERP implementation methodologies and frameworks. Results will serve as an input for a classification of the existing ERP implementation methodologies and frameworks. Also, this paper aims also at the professional ERP community involved in the process of ERP implementation by promoting a better understanding of ERP implementation methodologies and frameworks, its variety and history

    Quantifying Quality of Life

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    Describes technological methods and tools for objective and quantitative assessment of QoL Appraises technology-enabled methods for incorporating QoL measurements in medicine Highlights the success factors for adoption and scaling of technology-enabled methods This open access book presents the rise of technology-enabled methods and tools for objective, quantitative assessment of Quality of Life (QoL), while following the WHOQOL model. It is an in-depth resource describing and examining state-of-the-art, minimally obtrusive, ubiquitous technologies. Highlighting the required factors for adoption and scaling of technology-enabled methods and tools for QoL assessment, it also describes how these technologies can be leveraged for behavior change, disease prevention, health management and long-term QoL enhancement in populations at large. Quantifying Quality of Life: Incorporating Daily Life into Medicine fills a gap in the field of QoL by providing assessment methods, techniques and tools. These assessments differ from the current methods that are now mostly infrequent, subjective, qualitative, memory-based, context-poor and sparse. Therefore, it is an ideal resource for physicians, physicians in training, software and hardware developers, computer scientists, data scientists, behavioural scientists, entrepreneurs, healthcare leaders and administrators who are seeking an up-to-date resource on this subject
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