100,277 research outputs found

    Enabling Large-Scale Image Search with Co-Attention Mechanism

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    Content-based image retrieval (CBIR) consists of searching the most similar images to a given query. Most existing attention mechanisms for CBIR are query non-sensitive and are only based on single candidate image's feature regardless of the actual query content. This can result in incorrect regions especially when the target object is not salient or surrounded by distractors. This paper proposes an efficient and effective query sensitive co-attention mechanism for large scale CBIR tasks. Local feature selection and clustering are employed to reduce the computation cost caused by the query sensitivity. Experimental results indicate that the proposed co-attention method can generate good co-attention maps even under challenging situations leading to a new state of the art performance on several benchmark datasets

    Breast cancer and quality of life: medical information extraction from health forums

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    International audienceInternet health forums are a rich textual resource with content generated through free exchanges among patients and, in certain cases, health professionals. We tackle the problem of retrieving clinically relevant information from such forums, with relevant topics being defined from clinical auto-questionnaires. Texts in forums are largely unstructured and noisy, calling for adapted preprocessing and query methods. We minimize the number of false negatives in queries by using a synonym tool to achieve query expansion of initial topic keywords. To avoid false positives, we propose a new measure based on a statistical comparison of frequent co-occurrences in a large reference corpus (Web) to keep only relevant expansions. Our work is motivated by a study of breast cancer patients' health-related quality of life (QoL). We consider topics defined from a breast-cancer specific QoL-questionnaire. We quantify and structure occurrences in posts of a specialized French forum and outline important future developments

    Enhancing Content-And-Structure Information Retrieval using a Native XML Database

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    Three approaches to content-and-structure XML retrieval are analysed in this paper: first by using Zettair, a full-text information retrieval system; second by using eXist, a native XML database, and third by using a hybrid XML retrieval system that uses eXist to produce the final answers from likely relevant articles retrieved by Zettair. INEX 2003 content-and-structure topics can be classified in two categories: the first retrieving full articles as final answers, and the second retrieving more specific elements within articles as final answers. We show that for both topic categories our initial hybrid system improves the retrieval effectiveness of a native XML database. For ranking the final answer elements, we propose and evaluate a novel retrieval model that utilises the structural relationships between the answer elements of a native XML database and retrieves Coherent Retrieval Elements. The final results of our experiments show that when the XML retrieval task focusses on highly relevant elements our hybrid XML retrieval system with the Coherent Retrieval Elements module is 1.8 times more effective than Zettair and 3 times more effective than eXist, and yields an effective content-and-structure XML retrieval
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