Oliver Eigner

2papers

2 Papers

19.7SEMay 23
Beyond AI Delegation: A Prompt Pattern Framework for Productive Struggle and Evaluative Judgement in Secure Coding Education

Philipp Haindl, Oliver Eigner, Peter Kieseberg

Large language models make it easy for students to delegate writing, analysis, and problem-solving to automated systems, bypassing the effortful engagement that produces lasting understanding. We introduce a practical framework that helps educators keep GenAI in the course without removing the cognitive demands that make it worthwhile. We apply Design Science Research (DSR) to synthesise and adapt a taxonomy of nine prompt engineering patterns from established catalogs in the computer science literature, mapped to two pedagogical constructs: Productive Struggle and Evaluative Judgement. A course design for an Advanced Secure Coding module, structured using the DELTA framework, demonstrates the artifact's applicability. Nine prompt patterns, each mapped to a specific pedagogical function, give instructors fine-grained control over how students interact with AI. The secure coding design shows how three patterns (Flipped Interaction, Alternative Approaches, and Cognitive Verifier) scaffold vulnerability discovery and remediation while keeping students in the reasoning role. The framework provides a replicable approach to designing AI-augmented learning experiences that preserve student reasoning, and establishes a structured basis for future empirical evaluation in live course settings.

LGSep 18, 2021
Towards Resilient Artificial Intelligence: Survey and Research Issues

Oliver Eigner, Sebastian Eresheim, Peter Kieseberg et al.

Artificial intelligence (AI) systems are becoming critical components of today's IT landscapes. Their resilience against attacks and other environmental influences needs to be ensured just like for other IT assets. Considering the particular nature of AI, and machine learning (ML) in particular, this paper provides an overview of the emerging field of resilient AI and presents research issues the authors identify as potential future work.