Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (1089)
- Article (unreviewed) (558)
- Article (reviewed) (529)
- Part of a Book (453)
- Book (222)
- Other (138)
- Contribution to a Periodical (123)
- Patent (94)
- Report (62)
- Letter to Editor (30)
- Doctoral Thesis (26)
- Working Paper (7)
- Periodical Part (4)
- Study Thesis (2)
- Image (1)
- Moving Images (1)
Conference Type
- Konferenzartikel (856)
- Konferenz-Abstract (153)
- Sonstiges (40)
- Konferenz-Poster (31)
- Konferenzband (13)
Language
- German (1733)
- English (1594)
- Other language (5)
- Russian (3)
- Multiple languages (2)
- French (1)
- Spanish (1)
Has Fulltext
- no (3339) (remove)
Keywords
- Digitalisierung (39)
- RoboCup (32)
- Dünnschichtchromatographie (26)
- Arbeitszeugnis (22)
- Finite-Elemente-Methode (22)
- Energieversorgung (21)
- Kommunikation (21)
- Management (19)
- Industrie 4.0 (18)
- Machine Learning (18)
Institute
- Fakultät Maschinenbau und Verfahrenstechnik (M+V) (786)
- Fakultät Medien und Informationswesen (M+I) (bis 21.04.2021) (717)
- Fakultät Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik (E+I) (bis 03/2019) (704)
- Fakultät Wirtschaft (W) (558)
- Fakultät Elektrotechnik, Medizintechnik und Informatik (EMI) (ab 04/2019) (390)
- INES - Institut für nachhaltige Energiesysteme (178)
- Fakultät Medien (M) (ab 22.04.2021) (172)
- ivESK - Institut für verlässliche Embedded Systems und Kommunikationselektronik (133)
- IMLA - Institute for Machine Learning and Analytics (72)
- ACI - Affective and Cognitive Institute (57)
Open Access
- Closed Access (1241)
- Open Access (865)
- Closed (532)
- Bronze (189)
- Diamond (53)
- Gold (11)
- Hybrid (11)
- Grün (7)
Memento mori!
(2022)
Das plötzliche Ende des romantischen Komponisten Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy (1809–1847) gibt uns auch heute noch Rätsel auf. Einiges deutet auf ein rupturiertes zerebrales Aneurysma mit konsekutiver Subarachnoidalblutung hin. Das Quellenmaterial zu den Symptomen seiner Todeskrankheit wird in dieser Arbeit ausführlich vorgestellt und diskutiert. Eine mögliche familiäre Disposition im Sinne eines Ehlers-Danlos-Syndroms Typ IV wird erörtert.
Geleitwort
(2012)
Im Archiv für Kriminologie wurden bislang drei Arbeiten zur 3-D-CAD-Rekonstruktion der ersten "Eisernen Hand" des berühmten Reichsritters Gottfried ("Götz") von Berlichingen (1480-1562) vorgestellt. Mittlerweile sind einige neue Gesichtspunkte herausgearbeitet worden, die hier kurz als Ergänzung mitgeteilt werden sollen.
Hybrid SPECT/US
(2014)
eLetter zum Artikel "Hybrid EEG/EOG-based brain/neural hand exoskeleton restores fully independent daily living activities after quadriplegia" von Surjo R. Soekadar et al., veröffentlicht in Science Robotics, Vol. 1, No. 1 (DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.aag3296)
Nicht-invasives, nicht-ionisierendes funktionelles Neuroimaging mit räumlich und zeitlich hochauflösender Elektroenzephalographie oder Echtzeit-Naheinfrarotspektroskopie in Kombination mit modernen Robotorsystemen ist ein entscheidender Entwicklungsschritt auf dem Gebiet der Neuroprothetik und Brain-Machine-Interfaces. In der Medizintechnik an der Hochschule Offenburg wird hierzu geforscht.
The famous violin virtuoso Nicolò Paganini (born on 27 October 1782 in Genoa, died on 27 May 1840 in Nice) left us with many puzzles. An interesting aspect is his hair: In the 19th century, hair given away as a token of friendship or romantic love became very popular, and Paganini also seems to have made use of this fad. In 2009, a lock of hair, purportedly that of Paganini, kept in a locked presentation box together with a bilingual autograph inscription saying: "Alla Signora Chatterton avec les compliments de Nicolò Paganini" was bought at an auction. From this hair lock a sample was taken and was investigated morphologically by using digital light microscopy (digital microscope VHX-100, Keyence) in reflected and transmitted light with and without polarization at different magnifications up to 1:5,000. The sample was then compared with a hair sample from the possession of the Paganini family, which had been microscopically examined in 2012 by the co-author of this paper yielding numerous figures with measurement results that had been stored and could be retrieved for direct comparison. The hair sample consisted of ten strands of hair or hair fragments and was investigated with great effort for the following parameters: exogenous hair damage, especially feeding traces caused by parasites, modeling and angulation of hairs, hair thickness, medulla and pigmentation, curling and mercury load on the trace material. After evaluation of all findings not only a non-exclusion of identity can be determined, but due to the broad match of also rare findings there is no reasonable doubt about their identity. In addition, the findings suggest that the studied hair samples are in fact from Paganini's head. The present case of Nicolò Paganini's hair lock is also an excellent starting point for reflections on the probative value of trace hair investigations. This point is also critically discussed in the paper. Finally, this study shows that said lock of hair had probably really been dedicated and given to Eliza Davenport Latham (born on 25 November 1806, died on 9 January 1877), the future wife of the, at that time, best-known and most famous English harpist John Balsir Chatterton (born on 25 November 1804, died on 9 April 1871). Paganini must have met her on his concert tour 1831/32, where he had travelled to Paris, London, the rest of England, Scotland and Ireland.