12,686 research outputs found
Invariant behavioural based discrimination for individual representation
Writer identification based on cursive words is one of the extensive behavioural biometric that has involved many researchers to work in. Recently, its main idea is in forensic investigation and biometric analysis as such the handwriting style can be used as individual behavioural adaptation for authenticating an author. In this study, a novel approach of presenting cursive features of authors is presented. The invariants-based discriminability of the features is proposed by discretizing the moment features of each writer using biometric invariant discretization cutting point (BIDCP). BIDCP is introduced for features perseverance to obtain better individual representations and discriminations. Our experiments have revealed that by using the proposed method, the authorship identification based on cursive words is significantly increased with an average identification rate of 99.80%
An Account of Opinion Implicatures
While previous sentiment analysis research has concentrated on the
interpretation of explicitly stated opinions and attitudes, this work initiates
the computational study of a type of opinion implicature (i.e.,
opinion-oriented inference) in text. This paper described a rule-based
framework for representing and analyzing opinion implicatures which we hope
will contribute to deeper automatic interpretation of subjective language. In
the course of understanding implicatures, the system recognizes implicit
sentiments (and beliefs) toward various events and entities in the sentence,
often attributed to different sources (holders) and of mixed polarities; thus,
it produces a richer interpretation than is typical in opinion analysis.Comment: 50 Pages. Submitted to the journal, Language Resources and Evaluatio
XML Schema Clustering with Semantic and Hierarchical Similarity Measures
With the growing popularity of XML as the data representation language, collections of the XML data are exploded in numbers. The methods are required to manage and discover the useful information from them for the improved document handling. We present a schema clustering process by organising the heterogeneous XML schemas into various groups. The methodology considers not only the linguistic and the context of the elements but also the hierarchical structural similarity. We support our findings with experiments and analysis
New activity pattern in human interactive dynamics
We investigate the response function of human agents as demonstrated by
written correspondence, uncovering a new universal pattern for how the reactive
dynamics of individuals is distributed across the set of each agent's contacts.
In long-term empirical data on email, we find that the set of response times
considered separately for the messages to each different correspondent of a
given writer, generate a family of heavy-tailed distributions, which have
largely the same features for all agents, and whose characteristic times grow
exponentially with the rank of each correspondent. We furthermore show that
this universal behavioral pattern emerges robustly by considering weighted
moving averages of the priority-conditioned response-time probabilities
generated by a basic prioritization model. Our findings clarify how the range
of priorities in the inputs from one's environment underpin and shape the
dynamics of agents embedded in a net of reactive relations. These newly
revealed activity patterns might be present in other general interactive
environments, and constrain future models of communication and interaction
networks, affecting their architecture and evolution.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Follow Whom? Chinese Users Have Different Choice
Sina Weibo, which was launched in 2009, is the most popular Chinese
micro-blogging service. It has been reported that Sina Weibo has more than 400
million registered users by the end of the third quarter in 2012. Sina Weibo
and Twitter have a lot in common, however, in terms of the following
preference, Sina Weibo users, most of whom are Chinese, behave differently
compared with those of Twitter.
This work is based on a data set of Sina Weibo which contains 80.8 million
users' profiles and 7.2 billion relations and a large data set of Twitter.
Firstly some basic features of Sina Weibo and Twitter are analyzed such as
degree and activeness distribution, correlation between degree and activeness,
and the degree of separation. Then the following preference is investigated by
studying the assortative mixing, friend similarities, following distribution,
edge balance ratio, and ranking correlation, where edge balance ratio is newly
proposed to measure balance property of graphs. It is found that Sina Weibo has
a lower reciprocity rate, more positive balanced relations and is more
disassortative. Coinciding with Asian traditional culture, the following
preference of Sina Weibo users is more concentrated and hierarchical: they are
more likely to follow people at higher or the same social levels and less
likely to follow people lower than themselves. In contrast, the same kind of
following preference is weaker in Twitter. Twitter users are open as they
follow people from levels, which accords with its global characteristic and the
prevalence of western civilization. The message forwarding behavior is studied
by displaying the propagation levels, delays, and critical users. The following
preference derives from not only the usage habits but also underlying reasons
such as personalities and social moralities that is worthy of future research.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figure
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