These publications mostly results from a wide variety of activities at the university. Assume that following documents are published under the GNU General Public License V3 if its is not specified else wise.
In my bachelor thesis, we explore cross-lingual information to discover the vocabulary of an unseen target language. Starting out from a phoneme recognizer, we learn the alignment between the target language phoneme sequence and the source language word sequence. We utilize this alignment to group the target language phoneme sequence into words and extract from this the vocabulary of the target language.
In the final project of the robotics course at the National Taiwan University, we address autonomous path planning and tracking in a 3D space using an aircraft. We use shape detection, object depth calculation and dynamic navigation planning to navigate a quadrotor through a set of rings.
This paper discusses graph theoretical approaches to modeling and explaining the small world phenomenon. It arose from the pro-seminar Analysis of Social Networks [de] in winter term 2010/2011 at KIT.
Semantic Graph is a browser application for visualizing Open Linked Data. I developed this project working as student assistant of AIFB at KIT.
I published a paper about virtual memory management in 4.3BSD in context of the pro-seminar OS Internals in ST 2010 at KIT.
In order to accomplish the Software Engineering Practice in my third semester two fellow students and I were supposed to develop a tool for analysis of Social Networks.
In WT 09/10 and WT 10/11 I held discussion sections belonging to the course Grundbegriffe der Informatik (Basic Concepts of Computer Science). On this tutorial homepage you'll find slides and further information about this course.
celmac is a powerful simulator for two-dimensional Cellular Automata. The global function which determines the next state of each cell can be rewritten by the user via a simple programming language. I wrote this program and the proper term paper in secondary school, so please excuse poor academic wording and adequacy.