6,173 research outputs found
Investigative Simulation: Towards Utilizing Graph Pattern Matching for Investigative Search
This paper proposes the use of graph pattern matching for investigative graph
search, which is the process of searching for and prioritizing persons of
interest who may exhibit part or all of a pattern of suspicious behaviors or
connections. While there are a variety of applications, our principal
motivation is to aid law enforcement in the detection of homegrown violent
extremists. We introduce investigative simulation, which consists of several
necessary extensions to the existing dual simulation graph pattern matching
scheme in order to make it appropriate for intelligence analysts and law
enforcement officials. Specifically, we impose a categorical label structure on
nodes consistent with the nature of indicators in investigations, as well as
prune or complete search results to ensure sensibility and usefulness of
partial matches to analysts. Lastly, we introduce a natural top-k ranking
scheme that can help analysts prioritize investigative efforts. We demonstrate
performance of investigative simulation on a real-world large dataset.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. Paper to appear in the Fosint-SI 2016 conference
proceedings in conjunction with the 2016 IEEE/ACM International Conference on
Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining ASONAM 201
Crowdsourcing a Word-Emotion Association Lexicon
Even though considerable attention has been given to the polarity of words
(positive and negative) and the creation of large polarity lexicons, research
in emotion analysis has had to rely on limited and small emotion lexicons. In
this paper we show how the combined strength and wisdom of the crowds can be
used to generate a large, high-quality, word-emotion and word-polarity
association lexicon quickly and inexpensively. We enumerate the challenges in
emotion annotation in a crowdsourcing scenario and propose solutions to address
them. Most notably, in addition to questions about emotions associated with
terms, we show how the inclusion of a word choice question can discourage
malicious data entry, help identify instances where the annotator may not be
familiar with the target term (allowing us to reject such annotations), and
help obtain annotations at sense level (rather than at word level). We
conducted experiments on how to formulate the emotion-annotation questions, and
show that asking if a term is associated with an emotion leads to markedly
higher inter-annotator agreement than that obtained by asking if a term evokes
an emotion
A META-ANALYTIC REVIEW OF SOCIAL MEDIA STUDIES
Social media such as social networking sites, blogs, micro-blogs, Wikis, are increasingly and widely used in our daily lives. In the information system (IS) discipline, social media have become a hot research area and draw the attention of many scholars. The paper systematically reviewed social media studies published in Association for Information Systems (AIS) listed top 20 journals from 2009 to 2013. The publication time, journal preferences, research objects and research topics are discussed. Generally, the current social media studies including four areas, namely user, management, technology and information. Each area has distinct focuses and topics. By thoroughly analyzing the research topics, the authors formulate our projections and recommendations for future social media studies
BlogForever D5.1: Design and Specification of Case Studies
This document presents the specification and design of six case studies for testing the BlogForever platform implementation process. The report explains the data collection plan where users of the repository will provide usability feedback through questionnaires as well as details of scalability analysis through the creation of specific log files analytics. The case studies will investigate the sustainability of the platform, that it meets potential users’ needs and that is has an important long term impact
An Information Diffusion-Based Recommendation Framework for Micro-Blogging
Micro-blogging is increasingly evolving from a daily chatting tool into a critical platform for individuals and organizations to seek and share real-time news updates during emergencies. However, seeking and extracting useful information from micro-blogging sites poses significant challenges due to the volume of the traffic and the presence of a large body of irrelevant personal messages and spam. In this paper, we propose a novel recommendation framework to overcome this problem. By analyzing information diffusion patterns among a large set of micro-blogs that play the role of emergency news providers, our approach selects a small subset as recommended emergency news feeds for regular users. We evaluate our diffusion-based recommendation framework on Twitter during the early outbreak of H1N1 Flu. The evaluation results show that our method results in more balanced and comprehensive recommendations compared to benchmark approaches
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