1,037 research outputs found
An Exploratory Study of COVID-19 Misinformation on Twitter
During the COVID-19 pandemic, social media has become a home ground for
misinformation. To tackle this infodemic, scientific oversight, as well as a
better understanding by practitioners in crisis management, is needed. We have
conducted an exploratory study into the propagation, authors and content of
misinformation on Twitter around the topic of COVID-19 in order to gain early
insights. We have collected all tweets mentioned in the verdicts of
fact-checked claims related to COVID-19 by over 92 professional fact-checking
organisations between January and mid-July 2020 and share this corpus with the
community. This resulted in 1 500 tweets relating to 1 274 false and 276
partially false claims, respectively. Exploratory analysis of author accounts
revealed that the verified twitter handle(including Organisation/celebrity) are
also involved in either creating (new tweets) or spreading (retweet) the
misinformation. Additionally, we found that false claims propagate faster than
partially false claims. Compare to a background corpus of COVID-19 tweets,
tweets with misinformation are more often concerned with discrediting other
information on social media. Authors use less tentative language and appear to
be more driven by concerns of potential harm to others. Our results enable us
to suggest gaps in the current scientific coverage of the topic as well as
propose actions for authorities and social media users to counter
misinformation.Comment: 20 pages, nine figures, four tables. Submitted for peer review,
revision
On Constructing Persistent Identifiers with Persistent Resolution Targets
Persistent Identifiers (PID) are the foundation referencing digital assets in
scientific publications, books, and digital repositories. In its realization,
PIDs contain metadata and resolving targets in form of URLs that point to data
sets located on the network. In contrast to PIDs, the target URLs are typically
changing over time; thus, PIDs need continuous maintenance -- an effort that is
increasing tremendously with the advancement of e-Science and the advent of the
Internet-of-Things (IoT). Nowadays, billions of sensors and data sets are
subject of PID assignment. This paper presents a new approach of embedding
location independent targets into PIDs that allows the creation of
maintenance-free PIDs using content-centric network technology and overlay
networks. For proving the validity of the presented approach, the Handle PID
System is used in conjunction with Magnet Link access information encoding,
state-of-the-art decentralized data distribution with BitTorrent, and Named
Data Networking (NDN) as location-independent data access technology for
networks. Contrasting existing approaches, no green-field implementation of PID
or major modifications of the Handle System is required to enable
location-independent data dissemination with maintenance-free PIDs.Comment: Published IEEE paper of the FedCSIS 2016 (SoFAST-WS'16) conference,
11.-14. September 2016, Gdansk, Poland. Also available online:
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7733372
Muggl: The Muenster generator of glass-box test cases
Testing is a task that requires much effort, yet it is essential for developing software. Automated test case generation (TCG) promises to relieve humans of manual work. We introduce Muggl (the Muenster generator of glass-box test cases), which is developed at our institute. Muggl generates test cases for Java bytecode. It symbolically executes code and uses constraint solving techniques. While papers on Muggl have already been published, no comprehensive introduction of the tool exist. This working paper fills this gap
Handlungsempfehlungen für erfolgreiches Testen von Software in Unternehmen
Softwaretests sind als ein Hauptbestandteil des Entwicklungsprozesses ausschlaggebend für das Erstellen hochqualitativer Software. Wir haben mit regionalen Unternehmen zusammengearbeitet, um ihre Stärken und Schwächen bezüglich des Testens von Software kennenzulernen. Darauf aufbauend haben wir Handlungsempfehlungen erarbeitet, die über bisher in der Literatur zu findende Ratschläge hinausgehen. In diesem Bericht stellen wir das zugrundeliegende Projekt vor und skizzieren die gewählte Forschungsmethodik. Wir führen in einen Ordnungsrahmen für die Kategorisierung der Empfehlungen ein. Schließlich stellen wir exemplarisch vier besonders aussichtsreiche Handlungsempfehlungen vor und geben Implementierungshinweise. Dieser Bericht ergänzt die bisher zum Projekt erschienenen Artikel.Software testing as a main part of the development process is essential for the production of high quality software. We worked with regional enterprises in order to learn about their strengths and weaknesses with regard to testing. Based on the observations we derived recommendations that complement the existing literature. In this work we introduce the project and sketch our research method. We explain a framework for the categorization of the recommendations. Eventually, we exemplarily give four recommendations and offer hints for their implementation. This report supplements the articles on the project that so far have been published
Tagungsband 16. Kolloquium Programmiersprachen und Grundlagen der Programmierung (KPS'11): 26. bis 28. September 2011, Schloss Raesfeld, Münsterland
Dieser Arbeitsbericht fasst die Beiträge des 16. Kolloquium 'Programmiersprachen und Grundlagen der Programmierung (KPS'11)' zusammen, das vom 26. bis 28. September 2011 auf Schloss Raesfeld im Münsterland in Deutschland stattgefunden hat.This proceedings volume contains the work presented at the 16th Kolloquium 'Programmiersprachen und Grundlagen der Programmierung (KPS'11)' at Schloss Raesfeld, Münsterland, Germany from September 26th to 28th, 2011
Temperature and time-dependent effects of delayed blood processing on oxylipin concentrations in human plasma.
BACKGROUND:Oxidized derivatives of polyunsaturated fatty acids, collectively known as oxylipins, are labile bioactive mediators with diverse roles in human physiology and pathology. Oxylipins are increasingly being measured in plasma collected in clinical studies to investigate biological mechanisms and as pharmacodynamic biomarkers for nutrient-based and drug-based interventions. Whole blood is generally stored either on ice or at room temperature prior to processing. However, the potential impacts of delays in processing, and of temperature prior to processing, on oxylipin concentrations are incompletely understood. OBJECTIVE:To evaluate the effects of delayed processing of blood samples in a timeframe that is typical of a clinical laboratory setting, using typical storage temperatures, on concentrations of representative unesterified oxylipins measured by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. DESIGN:Whole blood (drawn on three separate occasions from a single person) was collected into 5 mL purple-top potassium-EDTA tubes and stored for 0, 10, 20, 30, 60 or 120 min at room temperature or on wet ice, followed by centrifugation at 4 °C for 10 min with plasma collection. Each sample was run in duplicate, therefore there were six tubes and up to six data points at each time point for each oxylipin at each condition (ice/room temperature). Representative oxylipins derived from arachidonic acid, docosahexaenoic acid, and linoleic acid were quantified by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Longitudinal models were used to estimate differences between temperature groups 2 h after blood draw. RESULTS:We found that most oxylipins measured in human plasma in traditional potassium-EDTA tubes are reasonably stable when stored on ice for up to 2 h prior to processing, with little evidence of auto-oxidation in either condition. By contrast, in whole blood stored at room temperature, substantial time-dependent increases in the 12-lipoxygenase-derived (12-HETE, 14-HDHA) and platelet-derived (thromboxane B2) oxylipins were observed. CONCLUSION:These findings suggest that certain plasma oxylipins can be measured with reasonable accuracy despite delayed processing for up to 2 h when blood is stored on ice prior to centrifugation. 12-Lipoxygenase- and platelet-derived oxylipins may be particularly sensitive to post-collection artifact with delayed processing at room temperature. Future studies are needed to determine impacts of duration and temperature of centrifugation on oxylipin concentrations
Which Factors Influence the Adoption of Social Software? An Exploratory Study of Indian Information Technology Consultancy Firms
Changes in EMG and Finger Force with Repeated Hangs from the Hands in Rock Climbers
The nature and degree of fatigue in muscles that control finger position during repeated sustained efforts in rock climbing have not been described. The purpose of this study was to identify changes in maximum hang time and forearm electromyogram (EMG) during repeated maximum duration hangs from a simulated rock feature. A second objective was to determine the effect of different recovery times between hangs upon changes in finger force. Five experienced rock climbers performed 2 test sessions on different days in a randomized order. Each session involved 8 repetitions of a maximum duration hang with either 1 min (R1) or 3 min (R3) resting recovery between hangs. Finger force (FF) was measured for the right hand via a piezoelectric force sensor fitted with a plate to accept the distal digits of four fingers. Peak EMG (EMGPK) and EMG Area (EMGAREA) were recorded from the anterior forearm for each hang and standardized as percent of maximum FF EMG prior to statistical analysis. Hang duration progressively decreased over repetitions but tended to plateau around repetition 5 for both R1 and R3 conditions. A significant difference was found for both recovery conditions and repetitions (p\u3c.05) as well as a significant interaction of the two factors (p\u3c.05) for hang duration. There were no significant differences for EMGPK among repetitions or between recovery conditions (p\u3e.05). EMGAREA decreased initially with repeated hangs during both R1 and R3 but this trend tended to plateau at repetition 3 for the R3 condition. A significant difference was found in EMGAREA for both recovery conditions and trials (p\u3c.05) as well as a significant interaction of the two factors (p\u3c.05). Mean FF decreased between pre- and post-hangs for both R1 and R3 however the difference was not significant. It was concluded that the overall decline in hang time is less with 3 min recovery vs 1 min recovery between hangs. Peak EMG does not appear to change despite this evidence of fatigue. A 3 min recovery interval between hang repetitions decreases the magnitude of fatigue experienced and enables a greater EMGAREA per hang
Assessing Requirements for Decision Support Systems in Humanitarian Operations
Efficient and effective decision making in the chaotic environment of humanitarian relief distribution (HRD) is a challenging task. Decision makers, in such situations, are required to concentrate on numerous attributes classified by three decision factors: objectives, variables, and constraints. Recent HRD literature mainly focuses on optimizing procedures while neglecting the quantification of influential requirements (factors) for information systems to provide decision-making support. This article addresses this gap by accumulating those affecting attributes from the literature. It investigates their practical implications in HRD by measuring the preferences of a Delphi panel of 23 experts. The results quantify the importance of each attribute – along with the newly added ones by the experts – in the proposed process model for HRD in a large-scale sudden onset. Our work provides future researchers not only with a comprehensive set of practically feasible decision-making factors in HRD but also with an understanding of their influences or correlations
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