802 research outputs found

    Artificial intelligence in the cyber domain: Offense and defense

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    Artificial intelligence techniques have grown rapidly in recent years, and their applications in practice can be seen in many fields, ranging from facial recognition to image analysis. In the cybersecurity domain, AI-based techniques can provide better cyber defense tools and help adversaries improve methods of attack. However, malicious actors are aware of the new prospects too and will probably attempt to use them for nefarious purposes. This survey paper aims at providing an overview of how artificial intelligence can be used in the context of cybersecurity in both offense and defense.Web of Science123art. no. 41

    Predictive Analysis on Twitter: Techniques and Applications

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    Predictive analysis of social media data has attracted considerable attention from the research community as well as the business world because of the essential and actionable information it can provide. Over the years, extensive experimentation and analysis for insights have been carried out using Twitter data in various domains such as healthcare, public health, politics, social sciences, and demographics. In this chapter, we discuss techniques, approaches and state-of-the-art applications of predictive analysis of Twitter data. Specifically, we present fine-grained analysis involving aspects such as sentiment, emotion, and the use of domain knowledge in the coarse-grained analysis of Twitter data for making decisions and taking actions, and relate a few success stories

    Social media mining for identification and exploration of health-related information from pregnant women

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    Widespread use of social media has led to the generation of substantial amounts of information about individuals, including health-related information. Social media provides the opportunity to study health-related information about selected population groups who may be of interest for a particular study. In this paper, we explore the possibility of utilizing social media to perform targeted data collection and analysis from a particular population group -- pregnant women. We hypothesize that we can use social media to identify cohorts of pregnant women and follow them over time to analyze crucial health-related information. To identify potentially pregnant women, we employ simple rule-based searches that attempt to detect pregnancy announcements with moderate precision. To further filter out false positives and noise, we employ a supervised classifier using a small number of hand-annotated data. We then collect their posts over time to create longitudinal health timelines and attempt to divide the timelines into different pregnancy trimesters. Finally, we assess the usefulness of the timelines by performing a preliminary analysis to estimate drug intake patterns of our cohort at different trimesters. Our rule-based cohort identification technique collected 53,820 users over thirty months from Twitter. Our pregnancy announcement classification technique achieved an F-measure of 0.81 for the pregnancy class, resulting in 34,895 user timelines. Analysis of the timelines revealed that pertinent health-related information, such as drug-intake and adverse reactions can be mined from the data. Our approach to using user timelines in this fashion has produced very encouraging results and can be employed for other important tasks where cohorts, for which health-related information may not be available from other sources, are required to be followed over time to derive population-based estimates.Comment: 9 page

    Analysis of Tweets for Social Media Health Applications

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    abstract: Social networking sites like Twitter have provided people a platform to connect with each other, to discuss and share information and news or to entertain themselves. As the number of users continues to grow there has been explosive growth in the data generated by these users. Such a vast data source has provided researchers a way to study and monitor public health. Accurately analyzing tweets is a difficult task mainly because of their short length, the inventive spellings and creative language expressions. Instead of focusing at the topic level, identifying tweets that have personal health experience mentions would be more helpful to researchers, governments and other organizations. Another important limitation in the current systems for social media health applications is the use of a disease-specific model and dataset to study a particular disease. Identifying adverse drug reactions is an important part of the drug development process. Detecting and extracting adverse drug mentions in tweets can supplement the list of adverse drug reactions that result from the drug trials and can help in the improvement of the drugs. This thesis aims to address these two challenges and proposes three systems. A generalizable system to identify personal health experience mentions across different disease domains, a system for automatic classifications of adverse effects mentions in tweets and a system to extract adverse drug mentions from tweets. The proposed systems use the transfer learning from language models to achieve notable scores on Social Media Mining for Health Applications(SMM4H) 2019 (Weissenbacher et al. 2019) shared tasks.Dissertation/ThesisMasters Thesis Computer Science 201

    URL-based Phishing Detection using Entropy of Non-Alphanumeric Characters

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