25,612 research outputs found
Visual Affect Around the World: A Large-scale Multilingual Visual Sentiment Ontology
Every culture and language is unique. Our work expressly focuses on the
uniqueness of culture and language in relation to human affect, specifically
sentiment and emotion semantics, and how they manifest in social multimedia. We
develop sets of sentiment- and emotion-polarized visual concepts by adapting
semantic structures called adjective-noun pairs, originally introduced by Borth
et al. (2013), but in a multilingual context. We propose a new
language-dependent method for automatic discovery of these adjective-noun
constructs. We show how this pipeline can be applied on a social multimedia
platform for the creation of a large-scale multilingual visual sentiment
concept ontology (MVSO). Unlike the flat structure in Borth et al. (2013), our
unified ontology is organized hierarchically by multilingual clusters of
visually detectable nouns and subclusters of emotionally biased versions of
these nouns. In addition, we present an image-based prediction task to show how
generalizable language-specific models are in a multilingual context. A new,
publicly available dataset of >15.6K sentiment-biased visual concepts across 12
languages with language-specific detector banks, >7.36M images and their
metadata is also released.Comment: 11 pages, to appear at ACM MM'1
A Recurrent Neural Model with Attention for the Recognition of Chinese Implicit Discourse Relations
We introduce an attention-based Bi-LSTM for Chinese implicit discourse
relations and demonstrate that modeling argument pairs as a joint sequence can
outperform word order-agnostic approaches. Our model benefits from a partial
sampling scheme and is conceptually simple, yet achieves state-of-the-art
performance on the Chinese Discourse Treebank. We also visualize its attention
activity to illustrate the model's ability to selectively focus on the relevant
parts of an input sequence.Comment: To appear at ACL2017, code available at
https://github.com/sronnqvist/discourse-ablst
CHORUS Deliverable 2.1: State of the Art on Multimedia Search Engines
Based on the information provided by European projects and national initiatives related to multimedia search as well as domains experts that participated in the CHORUS Think-thanks and workshops, this document reports on the state of the art related to multimedia content search from, a technical, and socio-economic perspective.
The technical perspective includes an up to date view on content based indexing and retrieval technologies, multimedia search in the context of mobile devices and peer-to-peer networks, and an overview of current evaluation and benchmark inititiatives to measure the performance of multimedia search engines.
From a socio-economic perspective we inventorize the impact and legal consequences of these technical advances and point out future directions of research
From Frequency to Meaning: Vector Space Models of Semantics
Computers understand very little of the meaning of human language. This
profoundly limits our ability to give instructions to computers, the ability of
computers to explain their actions to us, and the ability of computers to
analyse and process text. Vector space models (VSMs) of semantics are beginning
to address these limits. This paper surveys the use of VSMs for semantic
processing of text. We organize the literature on VSMs according to the
structure of the matrix in a VSM. There are currently three broad classes of
VSMs, based on term-document, word-context, and pair-pattern matrices, yielding
three classes of applications. We survey a broad range of applications in these
three categories and we take a detailed look at a specific open source project
in each category. Our goal in this survey is to show the breadth of
applications of VSMs for semantics, to provide a new perspective on VSMs for
those who are already familiar with the area, and to provide pointers into the
literature for those who are less familiar with the field
What Causes My Test Alarm? Automatic Cause Analysis for Test Alarms in System and Integration Testing
Driven by new software development processes and testing in clouds, system
and integration testing nowadays tends to produce enormous number of alarms.
Such test alarms lay an almost unbearable burden on software testing engineers
who have to manually analyze the causes of these alarms. The causes are
critical because they decide which stakeholders are responsible to fix the bugs
detected during the testing. In this paper, we present a novel approach that
aims to relieve the burden by automating the procedure. Our approach, called
Cause Analysis Model, exploits information retrieval techniques to efficiently
infer test alarm causes based on test logs. We have developed a prototype and
evaluated our tool on two industrial datasets with more than 14,000 test
alarms. Experiments on the two datasets show that our tool achieves an accuracy
of 58.3% and 65.8%, respectively, which outperforms the baseline algorithms by
up to 13.3%. Our algorithm is also extremely efficient, spending about 0.1s per
cause analysis. Due to the attractive experimental results, our industrial
partner, a leading information and communication technology company in the
world, has deployed the tool and it achieves an average accuracy of 72% after
two months of running, nearly three times more accurate than a previous
strategy based on regular expressions.Comment: 12 page
A Survey of Paraphrasing and Textual Entailment Methods
Paraphrasing methods recognize, generate, or extract phrases, sentences, or
longer natural language expressions that convey almost the same information.
Textual entailment methods, on the other hand, recognize, generate, or extract
pairs of natural language expressions, such that a human who reads (and trusts)
the first element of a pair would most likely infer that the other element is
also true. Paraphrasing can be seen as bidirectional textual entailment and
methods from the two areas are often similar. Both kinds of methods are useful,
at least in principle, in a wide range of natural language processing
applications, including question answering, summarization, text generation, and
machine translation. We summarize key ideas from the two areas by considering
in turn recognition, generation, and extraction methods, also pointing to
prominent articles and resources.Comment: Technical Report, Natural Language Processing Group, Department of
Informatics, Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece, 201
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