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Fachbereich / Studiengang
Daughters and Mothers
(2020)
Haiku of Maladisms
(2021)
Basics of Project Management
(2022)
Study Programme Development
(2022)
The PAQAF – the Pan-African Quality Assurance and Accreditation Framework – is an overarching framework for several action lines and instruments related to the convergence of the African Higher Education sector, and more specifically quality assurance and accreditation. It was adopted by the Specialized Technical Committee (STC) on Education, Science and Technology of the African Union Assembly in 2016. The implementation of some of the PAQAF’s action lines and the development of some of its instruments has been supported by the HAQAA initiative from 2015 to 2018 and is currently continued in the context of HAAQA2. Module 1 gives an overview of the PAQAF's deveopment and action lines.
Due to highly sophisticated, specialised models and data in production, digital twins, as defined as full digital representations, are neither computationally feasible nor useful. The complementary concept of digital shadows will provide cross-domain data access in real time by combining reduced engineering models and production data analytics.
Following the recent Internet of Things-induced
trends on digitization in general, industrial applications will further evolve as well. With a focus on the domains of manufacturing
and production, the Internet of Production pursues the vision of
a digitized, globally interconnected, yet secure environment by
establishing a distributed knowledge base.
Background. As part of our collaborative research of advancing
the scope of industrial applications through cybersecurity and
privacy, we identified a set of common challenges and pitfalls
that surface in such applied interdisciplinary collaborations.
Aim. Our goal with this paper is to support researchers in
the emerging field of cybersecurity in industrial settings by
formalizing our experiences as reference for other research
efforts, in industry and academia alike.
Method. Based on our experience, we derived a process cycle of
performing such interdisciplinary research, from the initial idea
to the eventual dissemination and paper writing. This presented
methodology strives to successfully bootstrap further research
and to encourage further work in this emerging area.
Results. Apart from our newly proposed process cycle, we report
on our experiences and conduct a case study applying this
methodology, raising awareness for challenges in cybersecurity
research for industrial applications. We further detail the interplay between our process cycle and the data lifecycle in
applied research data management. Finally, we augment our
discussion with an industrial as well as an academic view on
this research area and highlight that both areas still have
to overcome significant challenges to sustainably and securely
advance industrial applications.
Conclusions. With our proposed process cycle for interdisciplinary research in the intersection of cybersecurity and industrial application, we provide a foundation for further research.
We look forward to promising research initiatives, projects, and
directions that emerge based on our methodological work.