560,088 research outputs found
Proceedings of the 4th field robot event 2006, Stuttgart/Hohenheim, Germany, 23-24th June 2006
Zeer uitgebreid verslag van het 4e Fieldrobotevent, dat gehouden werd op 23 en 24 juni 2006 in Stuttgart/Hohenhei
Dialectal variation in German 3-verb clusters : looking for the best analysis
German dialects vary in which of the possible orders of the verbs in a 3-verb cluster they allow. In a still ongoing empirical investigation that I am undertaking together with Tanja Schmid, University of Stuttgart (Schmid and Vogel (2004)) we already found that each of the six logically possible permutations of the 3-verb cluster in (1) can be found in German dialects
Art as collaboration: 50 years of Edition Hansjörg Mayer
Extensive interview with artist, graphic designer and publisher Hansjörg Mayer by Eleanor Vonne Brown and Gustavo Grandal Montero, focusing particularly on his seminal work of the 1960s. Associated at an early stage with Max Bense’s Stuttgart Group, he developed his own “typoems” and other forms of experimental visual poetry, often employing complex conceptual methods (e.g. “typoactions”). His published output includes prints, portfolios, books and the broadsheet series ‘Futura’
Internationalism, Regionalism, and National Culture: Music Control in Bavaria, 1945–1948
For many Germans in the immediate postwar period, all that remained of their country was its art. Subjugation, destruction, the pain of unfathomable guilt: these had ripped away at the national psyche, severing nation from nationalism, person from people, the present from the past. “We are,” wrote Wolfgang Borchert in 1946, “a generation without a homecoming, because we have nothing to which we can return.” Nation: what would that word now mean? An occupied state no longer possessing statehood, a conquered people starved even of the moral strength that might come from resisting. Even if the institutions of national governance could be recreated, they could have no historical legitimacy; if Bonn were not to be Weimar, it would equally not be the kaisers’ or the Führer’s Berlin. For many, refuge from the shaming of the nation lay, as Theodor Heuss reflected, in a “decentralizing of the emotions,” in a “flight” to those fields “where the violence of the great political world shake-up is not felt so directly.” This drove literate Germans back to Goethe and music lovers to the endlessly-performed postwar symphonic cycles of Brahms and Beethoven. And yet, escaping into what Jost Hermand aptly termed “the protective wall of self-absorption” did not completely preclude connection to the national community of Germans. In fact, a powerful communion with the whole might still come through the personal enjoyment of a shared art or culture. In art might reside the essence of the national community, a stateless collectivity, without territories perhaps, but with borders and guardians nonetheless
Spatial diffusion of electric vehicles in the German metropolitan region of Stuttgart
At the moment, interest in electric vehicles (EVs) is increasing worldwide, mainly due to concerns about climate change and rising prices of fossil fuels. EVs still have some significant drawbacks compared to gasoline-powered cars. However, a small part of the population is expected to adopt this technology already within the next years, because higher purchase costs and lower driving range are of less concern to them. They are called the “Early Adopters†of EVs. In this study we developed scenarios for the spatial diffusion of EVs up to 2020 in private households in the municipalities and urban districts of the metropolitan region of Stuttgart in Germany. First, hypotheses of Early Adopters of EVs were constructed based on social mobility profiles and the demands of car drivers. Secondly, the number of these potential adopters was calculated with statistical data for each municipality and urban district. In a third step, we developed a Bass diffusion model with System Dynamics to simulate the spatial diffusion of EVs in the region of Stuttgart. The increase of EV-ownership in each Early Adopter-type in a single municipality depends on the chosen values of the parameters “Advertisement effectivenessâ€, “Contact Rate†and “Adoption Fraction†of the Bass model. Furthermore, neighbourhood effects were modeled such that the increase of EVs in one municipality also depends on the increase of EVs in the neighbouring municipalities. In the baseline scenario, significant spatial differences in the diffusion of EVs up to 2020 become apparent: the highest number of EV-holders will be found in the urban areas of the region. There exist also differences in the number of EVs present at each Early Adopter-type: The “Urban trend-setter†is prevalent in the central districts of Stuttgart, while the “Multi-car family†is mostly located in the more rural municipalities of the region of Stuttgart. The “Dynamic senior citizen†is almost equally distributed in the urban and rural areas. The results of the spatial distribution of potential adopters of EVs can be used for the automobile industry’s marketing campaigns as well as to identify the regional demand for EV charging infrastructure.
Composite Fermions and the Fermion-Chern-Simons Theory
The concept of composite fermions, and the related Fermion-Chern-Simons
theory, have been powerful tools for understanding quantum Hall systems with a
partially full lowest Landau level. We shall review some of the successes of
the Fermion-Chern-Simons theory, as well as some limitations and outstanding
issues.Comment: 13 pages, including 2 figures. Invited talk at International
Symposium, Quantum Hall Effect: Past, Present and Future, Stuttgart, July
2003. Proceedings to appear in Physica
Linking genebanks and farmers to urban high-value markets - The case of chili peppers in Peru and Bolivia [Poster]
Poster presented at Tropentag Conference. Stuttgart-Hohenheim (Germany), 17-19 Sep 201
The role of markets in food availability and market integration among smallholder farmers: the case of Western Kenya [Poster]
Poster presented at Tropentag 2013. International Research on Food Security, Natural Resource Management and Rural Development. "Agricultural development within the rural-urban continuum". Stuttgart-Hohenheim (Germany), Sep 17-19 2013
Bericht über die 138. Jahresversammlung der Deutschen Ornithologen-Gesellschaft (29. September – 4. Oktober 2005 in Stuttgart)
Die 138. Jahresversammlung der Deutsche Ornithologen-Gesellschaft fand auf Einladung des Staatlichen Museums für Naturkunde Stuttgart und mit Unterstützung der neu gegründeten Ornithologischen Gesellschaft Baden-Württemberg und der Universität Hohenheim in den Hörsälen der Universität Hohenheim statt. Schwerpunktthemen waren in diesem Jahr „Chronobiologie“ und „Ökologie von Insel-Lebensräumen“, weitere Hauptthemen „Monitoring und Atlasarbeiten“, „Vögel und Klimawandel“ und „Neozoen“. Die Jahresversammlung der DO-G fand zum zweiten Mal in Stuttgart statt. Bereits 1959 hatte das Staatliche Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart zu dieser wissenschaftlichen Tagung eingeladen, damals noch in das Schloss Rosenstein
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