205 research outputs found

    Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on Social Information Retrieval for Technology-Enhanced Learning

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    Learning and teaching resource are available on the Web - both in terms of digital learning content and people resources (e.g. other learners, experts, tutors). They can be used to facilitate teaching and learning tasks. The remaining challenge is to develop, deploy and evaluate Social information retrieval (SIR) methods, techniques and systems that provide learners and teachers with guidance in potentially overwhelming variety of choices. The aim of the SIRTEL’09 workshop is to look onward beyond recent achievements to discuss specific topics, emerging research issues, new trends and endeavors in SIR for TEL. The workshop will bring together researchers and practitioners to present, and more importantly, to discuss the current status of research in SIR and TEL and its implications for science and teaching

    Social and Semantic Contexts in Tourist Mobile Applications

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    The ongoing growth of the World Wide Web along with the increase possibility of access information through a variety of devices in mobility, has defi nitely changed the way users acquire, create, and personalize information, pushing innovative strategies for annotating and organizing it. In this scenario, Social Annotation Systems have quickly gained a huge popularity, introducing millions of metadata on di fferent Web resources following a bottom-up approach, generating free and democratic mechanisms of classi cation, namely folksonomies. Moving away from hierarchical classi cation schemas, folksonomies represent also a meaningful mean for identifying similarities among users, resources and tags. At any rate, they suff er from several limitations, such as the lack of specialized tools devoted to manage, modify, customize and visualize them as well as the lack of an explicit semantic, making di fficult for users to bene fit from them eff ectively. Despite appealing promises of Semantic Web technologies, which were intended to explicitly formalize the knowledge within a particular domain in a top-down manner, in order to perform intelligent integration and reasoning on it, they are still far from reach their objectives, due to di fficulties in knowledge acquisition and annotation bottleneck. The main contribution of this dissertation consists in modeling a novel conceptual framework that exploits both social and semantic contextual dimensions, focusing on the domain of tourism and cultural heritage. The primary aim of our assessment is to evaluate the overall user satisfaction and the perceived quality in use thanks to two concrete case studies. Firstly, we concentrate our attention on contextual information and navigation, and on authoring tool; secondly, we provide a semantic mapping of tags of the system folksonomy, contrasted and compared to the expert users' classi cation, allowing a bridge between social and semantic knowledge according to its constantly mutual growth. The performed user evaluations analyses results are promising, reporting a high level of agreement on the perceived quality in use of both the applications and of the speci c analyzed features, demonstrating that a social-semantic contextual model improves the general users' satisfactio

    A Survey on Cross-domain Recommendation: Taxonomies, Methods, and Future Directions

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    Traditional recommendation systems are faced with two long-standing obstacles, namely, data sparsity and cold-start problems, which promote the emergence and development of Cross-Domain Recommendation (CDR). The core idea of CDR is to leverage information collected from other domains to alleviate the two problems in one domain. Over the last decade, many efforts have been engaged for cross-domain recommendation. Recently, with the development of deep learning and neural networks, a large number of methods have emerged. However, there is a limited number of systematic surveys on CDR, especially regarding the latest proposed methods as well as the recommendation scenarios and recommendation tasks they address. In this survey paper, we first proposed a two-level taxonomy of cross-domain recommendation which classifies different recommendation scenarios and recommendation tasks. We then introduce and summarize existing cross-domain recommendation approaches under different recommendation scenarios in a structured manner. We also organize datasets commonly used. We conclude this survey by providing several potential research directions about this field

    Graph Neural Networks for Natural Language Processing: A Survey

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    Deep learning has become the dominant approach in coping with various tasks in Natural LanguageProcessing (NLP). Although text inputs are typically represented as a sequence of tokens, there isa rich variety of NLP problems that can be best expressed with a graph structure. As a result, thereis a surge of interests in developing new deep learning techniques on graphs for a large numberof NLP tasks. In this survey, we present a comprehensive overview onGraph Neural Networks(GNNs) for Natural Language Processing. We propose a new taxonomy of GNNs for NLP, whichsystematically organizes existing research of GNNs for NLP along three axes: graph construction,graph representation learning, and graph based encoder-decoder models. We further introducea large number of NLP applications that are exploiting the power of GNNs and summarize thecorresponding benchmark datasets, evaluation metrics, and open-source codes. Finally, we discussvarious outstanding challenges for making the full use of GNNs for NLP as well as future researchdirections. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first comprehensive overview of Graph NeuralNetworks for Natural Language Processing.Comment: 127 page

    Middleware de comunicações para a internet móvel futura

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    Doutoramento em Informática (MAP-I)A evolução constante em novas tecnologias que providenciam suporte à forma como os nossos dispositivos se ligam, bem como a forma como utilizamos diferentes capacidades e serviços on-line, criou um conjunto sem precedentes de novos desafios que motivam o desenvolvimento de uma recente área de investigação, denominada de Internet Futura. Nesta nova área de investigação, novos aspectos arquiteturais estão ser desenvolvidos, os quais, através da re-estruturação de componentes nucleares subjacentesa que compõem a Internet, progride-a de uma forma capaz de não são fazer face a estes novos desafios, mas também de a preparar para os desafios de amanhã. Aspectos chave pertencendo a este conjunto de desafios são os ambientes de rede heterogéneos compostos por diferentes tipos de redes de acesso, a cada vez maior mudança do tráfego peer-to-peer (P2P) como o tipo de tráfego mais utilizado na Internet, a orquestração de cenários da Internet das Coisas (IoT) que exploram mecanismos de interação Maquinaa-Maquina (M2M), e a utilização de mechanismos centrados na informação (ICN). Esta tese apresenta uma nova arquitetura capaz de simultaneamente fazer face a estes desafios, evoluindo os procedimentos de conectividade e entidades envolvidas, através da adição de uma camada de middleware, que age como um mecanismo de gestão de controlo avançado. Este mecanismo de gestão de controlo aproxima as entidades de alto nível (tais como serviços, aplicações, entidades de gestão de mobilidade, operações de encaminhamento, etc.) com as componentes das camadas de baixo nível (por exemplo, camadas de ligação, sensores e atuadores), permitindo uma otimização conjunta dos procedimentos de ligação subjacentes. Os resultados obtidos não só sublinham a flexibilidade dos mecanismos que compoem a arquitetura, mas também a sua capacidade de providenciar aumentos de performance quando comparados com outras soluÇÕes de funcionamento especÍfico, enquanto permite um maior leque de cenáios e aplicações.The constant evolution in new technologies that support the way our devices are able to connect, as well the way we use available on-line services and capabilities, has created a set of unprecedented new challenges that motivated the development of a recent research trend known as the Future Internet. In this research trend, new architectural aspects are being developed which, through the restructure of underlying core aspects composing the Internet, reshapes it in a way capable of not only facing these new challenges, but also preparing it to tackle tomorrow’s new set of complex issues. Key aspects belonging to this set of challenges are heterogeneous networking environments composed by di↵erent kinds of wireless access networks, the evergrowing change from peer-to-peer (P2P) to video as the most used kind of traffic in the Internet, the orchestration of Internet of Things (IoT) scenarios exploiting Machine-to-Machine (M2M) interactions, and the usage of Information-Centric Networking (ICN). This thesis presents a novel framework able to simultaneous tackle these challenges, empowering connectivity procedures and entities with a middleware acting as an advanced control management mechanism. This control management mechanism brings together both high-level entities (such as application services, mobility management entities, routing operations, etc.) with the lower layer components (e.g., link layers, sensor devices, actuators), allowing for a joint optimization of the underlying connectivity and operational procedures. Results highlight not only the flexibility of the mechanisms composing the framework, but also their ability in providing performance increases when compared with other specific purpose solutions, while allowing a wider range of scenarios and deployment possibilities

    Semantic discovery and reuse of business process patterns

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    Patterns currently play an important role in modern information systems (IS) development and their use has mainly been restricted to the design and implementation phases of the development lifecycle. Given the increasing significance of business modelling in IS development, patterns have the potential of providing a viable solution for promoting reusability of recurrent generalized models in the very early stages of development. As a statement of research-in-progress this paper focuses on business process patterns and proposes an initial methodological framework for the discovery and reuse of business process patterns within the IS development lifecycle. The framework borrows ideas from the domain engineering literature and proposes the use of semantics to drive both the discovery of patterns as well as their reuse

    Community Detection in Hypergraphen

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    Viele Datensätze können als Graphen aufgefasst werden, d.h. als Elemente (Knoten) und binäre Verbindungen zwischen ihnen (Kanten). Unter dem Begriff der "Complex Network Analysis" sammeln sich eine ganze Reihe von Verfahren, die die Untersuchung von Datensätzen allein aufgrund solcher struktureller Eigenschaften erlauben. "Community Detection" als Untergebiet beschäftigt sich mit der Identifikation besonders stark vernetzter Teilgraphen. Über den Nutzen hinaus, den eine Gruppierung verwandter Element direkt mit sich bringt, können derartige Gruppen zu einzelnen Knoten zusammengefasst werden, was einen neuen Graphen von reduzierter Komplexität hervorbringt, der die Makrostruktur des ursprünglichen Graphen unter Umständen besser hervortreten lässt. Fortschritte im Bereich der "Community Detection" verbessern daher auch das Verständnis komplexer Netzwerke im allgemeinen. Nicht jeder Datensatz lässt sich jedoch angemessen mit binären Relationen darstellen - Relationen höherer Ordnung führen zu sog. Hypergraphen. Gegenstand dieser Arbeit ist die Verallgemeinerung von Ansätzen zur "Community Detection" auf derartige Hypergraphen. Im Zentrum der Aufmerksamkeit stehen dabei "Social Bookmarking"-Datensätze, wie sie von Benutzern von "Bookmarking"-Diensten erzeugt werden. Dabei ordnen Benutzer Dokumenten frei gewählte Stichworte, sog. "Tags" zu. Dieses "Tagging" erzeugt, für jede Tag-Zuordnung, eine ternäre Verbindung zwischen Benutzer, Dokument und Tag, was zu Strukturen führt, die 3-partite, 3-uniforme (im folgenden 3,3-, oder allgemeiner k,k-) Hypergraphen genannt werden. Die Frage, der diese Arbeit nachgeht, ist wie diese Strukturen formal angemessen in "Communities" unterteilt werden können, und wie dies das Verständnis dieser Datensätze erleichtert, die potenziell sehr reich an latenten Informationen sind. Zunächst wird eine Verallgemeinerung der verbundenen Komponenten für k,k-Hypergraphen eingeführt. Die normale Definition verbundener Komponenten weist auf den untersuchten Datensätzen, recht uninformativ, alle Elemente einer einzelnen Riesenkomponente zu. Die verallgemeinerten, so genannten hyper-inzidenten verbundenen Komponenten hingegen zeigen auf den "Social Bookmarking"-Datensätzen eine charakteristische Größenverteilung, die jedoch bspw. von Spam-Verhalten zerstört wird - was eine Verbindung zwischen Verhaltensmustern und strukturellen Eigenschaften zeigt, der im folgenden weiter nachgegangen wird. Als nächstes wird das allgemeine Thema der "Community Detection" auf k,k-Hypergraphen eingeführt. Drei Herausforderungen werden definiert, die mit der naiven Anwendung bestehender Verfahren nicht gemeistert werden können. Außerdem werden drei Familien synthetischer Hypergraphen mit "Community"-Strukturen von steigender Komplexität eingeführt, die prototypisch für Situationen stehen, die ein erfolgreicher Detektionsansatz rekonstruieren können sollte. Der zentrale methodische Beitrag dieser Arbeit besteht aus der im folgenden dargestellten Entwicklung eines multipartiten (d.h. für k,k-Hypergraphen geeigneten) Verfahrens zur Erkennung von "Communities". Es basiert auf der Optimierung von Modularität, einem etablierten Verfahrung zur Erkennung von "Communities" auf nicht-partiten, d.h. "normalen" Graphen. Ausgehend vom einfachst möglichen Ansatz wird das Verfahren iterativ verfeinert, um den zuvor definierten sowie neuen, in der Praxis aufgetretenen Herausforderungen zu begegnen. Am Ende steht die Definition der "ausgeglichenen multi-partiten Modularität". Schließlich wird ein interaktives Werkzeug zur Untersuchung der so gewonnenen "Community"-Zuordnungen vorgestellt. Mithilfe dieses Werkzeugs können die Vorteile der zuvor eingeführten Modularität demonstriert werden: So können komplexe Zusammenhänge beobachtet werden, die den einfacheren Verfahren entgehen. Diese Ergebnisse werden von einer stärker quantitativ angelegten Untersuchung bestätigt: Unüberwachte Qualitätsmaße, die bspw. den Kompressionsgrad berücksichtigen, können über eine größere Menge von Beispielen die Vorteile der ausgeglichenen multi-partiten Modularität gegenüber den anderen Verfahren belegen. Zusammenfassend lassen sich die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit in zwei Bereiche einteilen: Auf der praktischen Seite werden Werkzeuge zur Erforschung von "Social Bookmarking"-Daten bereitgestellt. Demgegenüber stehen theoretische Beiträge, die für Graphen etablierte Konzepte - verbundene Komponenten und "Community Detection" - auf k,k-Hypergraphen übertragen.Many datasets can be interpreted as graphs, i.e. as elements (nodes) and binary relations between them (edges). Under the label of complex network analysis, a vast array of graph-based methods allows the exploration of datasets purely based on such structural properties. Community detection, as a subfield of network analysis, aims to identify well-connected subparts of graphs. While the grouping of related elements is useful in itself, these groups can furthermore be collapsed into single nodes, creating a new graph of reduced complexity which may better reveal the original graph's macrostructure. Therefore, advances in community detection improve the understanding of complex networks in general. However, not every dataset can be modelled properly with binary relations - higher-order relations give rise to so-called hypergraphs. This thesis explores the generalization of community detection approaches to hypergraphs. In the focus of attention are social bookmarking datasets, created by users of online bookmarking services who assign freely chosen keywords, so-called "tags", to documents. This "tagging" creates, for each tag assignment, a ternary connection between the user, the document, and the tag, inducing particular structures called 3-partite, 3-uniform hypergraphs (henceforth called 3,3- or more generally k,k-hypergraphs). The question pursued here is how to decompose these structures in a formally adequate manner, and how this improves the understanding of these rich datasets. First, a generalization of connected components to k,k-hypergraphs is proposed. The standard definition of connected components here rather uninformatively assigns almost all elements to a single giant component. The generalized so-called hyperincident connected components, however, show a characteristic size distribution on the social bookmarking datasets that is disrupted by, e.g., spamming activity - demonstrating a link between behavioural patterns and structural features that is further explored in the following. Next, the general topic of community detection in k,k-hypergraphs is introduced. Three challenges are posited that are not met by the naive application of standard techniques, and three families of synthetic hypergraphs are introduced containing increasingly complex community setups that a successful detection approach must be able to identify. The main methodical contribution of this thesis consists of the following development of a multi-partite (i.e. suitable for k,k-hypergraphs) community detection algorithm. It is based on modularity optimization, a well-established algorithm to detect communities in non-partite, i.e. "normal" graphs. Starting from the simplest approach possible, the method is successively refined to meet the previously defined as well as empirically encountered challenges, culminating in the definition of the "balanced multi-partite modularity". Finally, an interactive tool for exploring the obtained community assignments is introduced. Using this tool, the benefits of balanced multi-partite modularity can be shown: Intricate patters can be observed that are missed by the simpler approaches. These findings are confirmed by a more quantitative examination: Unsupervised quality measures considering, e.g., compression document the advantages of this approach on a larger number of samples. To conclude, the contributions of this thesis are twofold. It provides practical tools for the analysis of social bookmarking data, complemented with theoretical contributions, the generalization of connected components and modularity from graphs to k,k-hypergraphs

    Analysis and Visualisation of Edge Entanglement in Multiplex Networks

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    Cette thèse présente une nouvelle méthodologie pour analyser des réseaux. Nous développons l'intrication d'un réseau multiplex, qui se matérialise sous forme d'une mesure d'intensité et d'homogénéité, et d'une abstraction, le réseau d'interaction des catalyseurs, auxquels sont associés des indices d'intrication. Nous présentons ensuite la mise en place d'outils spécifiques pour l'analyse visuelle des réseaux complexes qui tirent profit de cette méthodologie. Ces outils présente une vue double de deux réseaux,qui inclue une un algorithme de dessin, une interaction associant brossage d'une sélection et de multiples liens pré-attentifs. Nous terminons ce document par la présentation détaillée d'applications dans de multiples domaines.When it comes to comprehension of complex phenomena, humans need to understand what interactions lie within them.These interactions are often captured with complex networks. However, the interaction pluralism is often shallowed by traditional network models. We propose a new way to look at these phenomena through the lens of multiplex networks, in which catalysts are drivers of the interaction through substrates. To study the entanglement of a multiplex network is to study how edges intertwine, in other words, how catalysts interact. Our entanglement analysis results in a full set of new objects which completes traditional network approaches: the entanglement homogeneity and intensity of the multiplex network, and the catalyst interaction network, with for each catalyst, an entanglement index. These objects are very suitable for embedment in a visual analytics framework, to enable comprehension of a complex structure. We thus propose of visual setting with coordinated multiple views. We take advantage of mental mapping and visual linking to present simultaneous information of a multiplex network at three different levels of abstraction. We complete brushing and linking with a leapfrog interaction that mimics the back-and-forth process involved in users' comprehension. The method is validated and enriched through multiple applications including assessing group cohesion in document collections, and identification of particular associations in social networks.BORDEAUX1-Bib.electronique (335229901) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Context-Aware Personalized Point-of-Interest Recommendation System

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    The increasing volume of information has created overwhelming challenges to extract the relevant items manually. Fortunately, the online systems, such as e-commerce (e.g., Amazon), location-based social networks (LBSNs) (e.g., Facebook) among many others have the ability to track end users\u27 browsing and consumption experiences. Such explicit experiences (e.g., ratings) and many implicit contexts (e.g., social, spatial, temporal, and categorical) are useful in preference elicitation and recommendation. As an emerging branch of information filtering, the recommendation systems are already popular in many domains, such as movies (e.g., YouTube), music (e.g., Pandora), and Point-of-Interest (POI) (e.g., Yelp). The POI domain has many contextual challenges (e.g., spatial (preferences to a near place), social (e.g., friend\u27s influence), temporal (e.g., popularity at certain time), categorical (similar preferences to places with same category), locality of POI, etc.) that can be crucial for an efficient recommendation. The user reviews shared across different social networks provide granularity in users\u27 consumption experience. From the data mining and machine learning perspective, following three research directions are identified and considered relevant to an efficient context-aware POI recommendation, (1) incorporation of major contexts into a single model and a detailed analysis of the impact of those contexts, (2) exploitation of user activity and location influence to model hierarchical preferences, and (3) exploitation of user reviews to formulate the aspect opinion relation and to generate explanation for recommendation. This dissertation presents different machine learning and data mining-based solutions to address the above-mentioned research problems, including, (1) recommendation models inspired from contextualized ranking and matrix factorization that incorporate the major contexts and help in analysis of their importance, (2) hierarchical and matrix-factorization models that formulate users\u27 activity and POI influences on different localities that model hierarchical preferences and generate individual and sequence recommendations, and (3) graphical models inspired from natural language processing and neural networks to generate recommendations augmented with aspect-based explanations

    Deliverable D1.1 State of the art and requirements analysis for hypervideo

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    This deliverable presents a state-of-art and requirements analysis report for hypervideo authored as part of the WP1 of the LinkedTV project. Initially, we present some use-case (viewers) scenarios in the LinkedTV project and through the analysis of the distinctive needs and demands of each scenario we point out the technical requirements from a user-side perspective. Subsequently we study methods for the automatic and semi-automatic decomposition of the audiovisual content in order to effectively support the annotation process. Considering that the multimedia content comprises of different types of information, i.e., visual, textual and audio, we report various methods for the analysis of these three different streams. Finally we present various annotation tools which could integrate the developed analysis results so as to effectively support users (video producers) in the semi-automatic linking of hypervideo content, and based on them we report on the initial progress in building the LinkedTV annotation tool. For each one of the different classes of techniques being discussed in the deliverable we present the evaluation results from the application of one such method of the literature to a dataset well-suited to the needs of the LinkedTV project, and we indicate the future technical requirements that should be addressed in order to achieve higher levels of performance (e.g., in terms of accuracy and time-efficiency), as necessary
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