Publikation
The Shopping Experience of Tomorrow: Human-Centered and Resource-Adaptive
Wolfgang Wahlster; Michael Feld; Patrick Gebhard; Dominikus Heckmann; Ralf Jung; Michael Kruppa; Michael Schmitz; Lübomira Spassova; Rainer Wasinger
In: Matthew Crocker; Jörg Siekmann (Hrsg.). Resource-Adaptive Cognitive Processes. Pages 205-237, Cognitive Technologies, ISBN 978-3-540-89407-0, Springer, Berlin Heidelberg, 2010.
Zusammenfassung
The contributions to this volume are drawn from the interdisciplinary research carried
out within the Sonderforschungsbereich (SFB 378), a special long-term funding
scheme of the German National Science Foundation (DFG). Sonderforschungsbereich
378 was situated at Saarland University, with colleagues from artificial intelligence,
computational linguistics, computer science, philosophy, psychology and
in its final phases' cognitive neuroscience and psycholinguistics.
The funding covered a period of 12 years, which was split into four phases
of 3 years each, ending in December of 2007. Every sub-period culminated in
an intensive reviewing process, comprising written reports as well as on-site presentations
and demonstrations to the external reviewers. We are most grateful to
these reviewers for their extensive support and critical feedback; they contributed
their time and labor freely to the DFG,1 the independent and self-organized institution
of German scientists. The final evaluation of the DFG reviewers judged
the overall performance and the actual work with the highest possible mark, i.e. excellent.
All contributions were written especially for this volume and summarize 12 years
of research that has resulted in several hundred individual publications. They represent
in our opinion the most important subset of the many individual projects
and offer an overarching perspective not reflected in the individual scientific publications.
Specifically, contributors sought to present their results in a summary
fashion covering the main findings of this long period, while also making clear
the technical and scientific contribution to the overarching theme of the volume:
resource-adaptive cognitive processes. Each paper was reviewed by an internal
and external expert in the specific subject area, and finally by the two editors.
We are indebted to these reviewers, who offered their time to review each of the
contributions.