195 research outputs found
Towards Personalized and Human-in-the-Loop Document Summarization
The ubiquitous availability of computing devices and the widespread use of
the internet have generated a large amount of data continuously. Therefore, the
amount of available information on any given topic is far beyond humans'
processing capacity to properly process, causing what is known as information
overload. To efficiently cope with large amounts of information and generate
content with significant value to users, we require identifying, merging and
summarising information. Data summaries can help gather related information and
collect it into a shorter format that enables answering complicated questions,
gaining new insight and discovering conceptual boundaries.
This thesis focuses on three main challenges to alleviate information
overload using novel summarisation techniques. It further intends to facilitate
the analysis of documents to support personalised information extraction. This
thesis separates the research issues into four areas, covering (i) feature
engineering in document summarisation, (ii) traditional static and inflexible
summaries, (iii) traditional generic summarisation approaches, and (iv) the
need for reference summaries. We propose novel approaches to tackle these
challenges, by: i)enabling automatic intelligent feature engineering, ii)
enabling flexible and interactive summarisation, iii) utilising intelligent and
personalised summarisation approaches. The experimental results prove the
efficiency of the proposed approaches compared to other state-of-the-art
models. We further propose solutions to the information overload problem in
different domains through summarisation, covering network traffic data, health
data and business process data.Comment: PhD thesi
Text-to-picture tools, systems, and approaches: a survey
Text-to-picture systems attempt to facilitate high-level, user-friendly communication between humans and computers while promoting understanding of natural language. These systems interpret a natural language text and transform it into a visual format as pictures or images that are either static or dynamic. In this paper, we aim to identify current difficulties and the main problems faced by prior systems, and in particular, we seek to investigate the feasibility of automatic visualization of Arabic story text through multimedia. Hence, we analyzed a number of well-known text-to-picture systems, tools, and approaches. We showed their constituent steps, such as knowledge extraction, mapping, and image layout, as well as their performance and limitations. We also compared these systems based on a set of criteria, mainly natural language processing, natural language understanding, and input/output modalities. Our survey showed that currently emerging techniques in natural language processing tools and computer vision have made promising advances in analyzing general text and understanding images and videos. Furthermore, important remarks and findings have been deduced from these prior works, which would help in developing an effective text-to-picture system for learning and educational purposes. - 2019, The Author(s).This work was made possible by NPRP grant #10-0205-170346 from the Qatar National Research Fund (a member of Qatar Foundation). The statements made herein are solely the responsibility of the authors
Foundations and Recent Trends in Multimodal Machine Learning: Principles, Challenges, and Open Questions
Multimodal machine learning is a vibrant multi-disciplinary research field
that aims to design computer agents with intelligent capabilities such as
understanding, reasoning, and learning through integrating multiple
communicative modalities, including linguistic, acoustic, visual, tactile, and
physiological messages. With the recent interest in video understanding,
embodied autonomous agents, text-to-image generation, and multisensor fusion in
application domains such as healthcare and robotics, multimodal machine
learning has brought unique computational and theoretical challenges to the
machine learning community given the heterogeneity of data sources and the
interconnections often found between modalities. However, the breadth of
progress in multimodal research has made it difficult to identify the common
themes and open questions in the field. By synthesizing a broad range of
application domains and theoretical frameworks from both historical and recent
perspectives, this paper is designed to provide an overview of the
computational and theoretical foundations of multimodal machine learning. We
start by defining two key principles of modality heterogeneity and
interconnections that have driven subsequent innovations, and propose a
taxonomy of 6 core technical challenges: representation, alignment, reasoning,
generation, transference, and quantification covering historical and recent
trends. Recent technical achievements will be presented through the lens of
this taxonomy, allowing researchers to understand the similarities and
differences across new approaches. We end by motivating several open problems
for future research as identified by our taxonomy
Survey of the State of the Art in Natural Language Generation: Core tasks, applications and evaluation
This paper surveys the current state of the art in Natural Language
Generation (NLG), defined as the task of generating text or speech from
non-linguistic input. A survey of NLG is timely in view of the changes that the
field has undergone over the past decade or so, especially in relation to new
(usually data-driven) methods, as well as new applications of NLG technology.
This survey therefore aims to (a) give an up-to-date synthesis of research on
the core tasks in NLG and the architectures adopted in which such tasks are
organised; (b) highlight a number of relatively recent research topics that
have arisen partly as a result of growing synergies between NLG and other areas
of artificial intelligence; (c) draw attention to the challenges in NLG
evaluation, relating them to similar challenges faced in other areas of Natural
Language Processing, with an emphasis on different evaluation methods and the
relationships between them.Comment: Published in Journal of AI Research (JAIR), volume 61, pp 75-170. 118
pages, 8 figures, 1 tabl
Text–to–Video: Image Semantics and NLP
When aiming at automatically translating an arbitrary text into a visual story, the main challenge consists in finding a semantically close visual representation whereby the displayed meaning should remain the same as in the given text. Besides, the appearance of an image itself largely influences how its meaningful information is transported towards an observer. This thesis now demonstrates that investigating in both, image semantics as well as the semantic relatedness between visual and textual sources enables us to tackle the challenging semantic gap and to find a semantically close translation from natural language to a corresponding visual representation.
Within the last years, social networking became of high interest leading to an enormous and still increasing amount of online available data. Photo sharing sites like Flickr allow users to associate textual information with their uploaded imagery. Thus, this thesis exploits this huge knowledge source of user generated data providing initial links between images and words, and other meaningful data.
In order to approach visual semantics, this work presents various methods to analyze the visual structure as well as the appearance of images in terms of meaningful similarities, aesthetic appeal, and emotional effect towards an observer. In detail, our GPU-based approach efficiently finds visual similarities between images in large datasets across visual domains and identifies various meanings for ambiguous words exploring similarity in online search results. Further, we investigate in the highly subjective aesthetic appeal of images and make use of deep learning to directly learn aesthetic rankings from a broad diversity of user reactions in social online behavior. To gain even deeper insights into the influence of visual appearance towards an observer, we explore how simple image processing is capable of actually changing the emotional perception and derive a simple but effective image filter.
To identify meaningful connections between written text and visual representations, we employ methods from Natural Language Processing (NLP). Extensive textual processing allows us to create semantically relevant illustrations for simple text elements as well as complete storylines. More precisely, we present an approach that resolves dependencies in textual descriptions to arrange 3D models correctly. Further, we develop a method that finds semantically relevant illustrations to texts of different types based on a novel hierarchical querying algorithm. Finally, we present an optimization based framework that is capable of not only generating semantically relevant but also visually coherent picture stories in different styles.Bei der automatischen Umwandlung eines beliebigen Textes in eine visuelle Geschichte, besteht die größte Herausforderung darin eine semantisch passende visuelle Darstellung zu finden. Dabei sollte die Bedeutung der Darstellung dem vorgegebenen Text entsprechen. Darüber hinaus hat die Erscheinung eines Bildes einen großen Einfluß darauf, wie seine bedeutungsvollen Inhalte auf einen Betrachter übertragen werden. Diese Dissertation zeigt, dass die Erforschung sowohl der Bildsemantik als auch der semantischen Verbindung zwischen visuellen und textuellen Quellen es ermöglicht, die anspruchsvolle semantische Lücke zu schließen und eine semantisch nahe Übersetzung von natürlicher Sprache in eine entsprechend sinngemäße visuelle Darstellung zu finden.
Des Weiteren gewann die soziale Vernetzung in den letzten Jahren zunehmend an Bedeutung, was zu einer enormen und immer noch wachsenden Menge an online verfügbaren Daten geführt hat. Foto-Sharing-Websites wie Flickr ermöglichen es Benutzern, Textinformationen mit ihren hochgeladenen Bildern zu verknüpfen. Die vorliegende Arbeit nutzt die enorme Wissensquelle von benutzergenerierten Daten welche erste Verbindungen zwischen Bildern und Wörtern sowie anderen aussagekräftigen Daten zur Verfügung stellt.
Zur Erforschung der visuellen Semantik stellt diese Arbeit unterschiedliche Methoden vor, um die visuelle Struktur sowie die Wirkung von Bildern in Bezug auf bedeutungsvolle Ähnlichkeiten, ästhetische Erscheinung und emotionalem Einfluss auf einen Beobachter zu analysieren. Genauer gesagt, findet unser GPU-basierter Ansatz effizient visuelle Ähnlichkeiten zwischen Bildern in großen Datenmengen quer über visuelle Domänen hinweg und identifiziert verschiedene Bedeutungen für mehrdeutige Wörter durch die Erforschung von Ähnlichkeiten in Online-Suchergebnissen. Des Weiteren wird die höchst subjektive ästhetische Anziehungskraft von Bildern untersucht und "deep learning" genutzt, um direkt ästhetische Einordnungen aus einer breiten Vielfalt von Benutzerreaktionen im sozialen Online-Verhalten zu lernen. Um noch tiefere Erkenntnisse über den Einfluss des visuellen Erscheinungsbildes auf einen Betrachter zu gewinnen, wird erforscht, wie alleinig einfache Bildverarbeitung in der Lage ist, tatsächlich die emotionale Wahrnehmung zu verändern und ein einfacher aber wirkungsvoller Bildfilter davon abgeleitet werden kann.
Um bedeutungserhaltende Verbindungen zwischen geschriebenem Text und visueller Darstellung zu ermitteln, werden Methoden des "Natural Language Processing (NLP)" verwendet, die der Verarbeitung natürlicher Sprache dienen. Der Einsatz umfangreicher Textverarbeitung ermöglicht es, semantisch relevante Illustrationen für einfache Textteile sowie für komplette Handlungsstränge zu erzeugen. Im Detail wird ein Ansatz vorgestellt, der Abhängigkeiten in Textbeschreibungen auflöst, um 3D-Modelle korrekt anzuordnen. Des Weiteren wird eine Methode entwickelt die, basierend auf einem neuen hierarchischen Such-Anfrage Algorithmus, semantisch relevante Illustrationen zu Texten verschiedener Art findet. Schließlich wird ein optimierungsbasiertes Framework vorgestellt, das nicht nur semantisch relevante, sondern auch visuell kohärente Bildgeschichten in verschiedenen Bildstilen erzeugen kann
Cultural Heritage Storytelling, Engagement and Management in the Era of Big Data and the Semantic Web
The current Special Issue launched with the aim of further enlightening important CH areas, inviting researchers to submit original/featured multidisciplinary research works related to heritage crowdsourcing, documentation, management, authoring, storytelling, and dissemination. Audience engagement is considered very important at both sites of the CH production–consumption chain (i.e., push and pull ends). At the same time, sustainability factors are placed at the center of the envisioned analysis. A total of eleven (11) contributions were finally published within this Special Issue, enlightening various aspects of contemporary heritage strategies placed in today’s ubiquitous society. The finally published papers are related but not limited to the following multidisciplinary topics:Digital storytelling for cultural heritage;Audience engagement in cultural heritage;Sustainability impact indicators of cultural heritage;Cultural heritage digitization, organization, and management;Collaborative cultural heritage archiving, dissemination, and management;Cultural heritage communication and education for sustainable development;Semantic services of cultural heritage;Big data of cultural heritage;Smart systems for Historical cities – smart cities;Smart systems for cultural heritage sustainability
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Modeling the Multi-mode Distribution in Self-Supervised Language Models
Self-supervised large language models (LMs) have become a highly-influential and foundational tool for many NLP models. For this reason, their expressivity is an important topic of study. In near-universal practice, given the language context, the model predicts a word from the vocabulary using a single embedded vector representation of both context and dictionary entries. Note that the context sometimes implies that the distribution over predicted words should be multi-modal in embedded space. However, the context’s single-vector representation provably fails to capture such a distribution. To address this limitation, we propose to represent context with multiple vector embeddings, which we term facets. This is distinct from previous work on multi-sense vocabulary embeddings, which employs multiple vectors for the dictionary entries, not the context.
In this dissertation, we first present the theoretical limitations of the single context embedding in LMs and how the theoretical analyses suggest new alternative softmax layers that encode a context as multiple embeddings. The proposed alternatives achieve better perplexity than the mixture of softmax (MoS), especially given an ambiguous context, without adding significant computational cost to LMs. Our approaches also let GPT-2 learn to properly copy the entities from the context, which increases the coherence of the generated text without requiring any labels.
In addition to predicting the next word, we also use multiple CLS embeddings to improve state-of-the-art pretraining methods for BERT on natural language understanding (NLU) benchmarks without introducing significant extra parameters or computations, especially when the training datasets are small. Furthermore, we show that our multi-facet embeddings improve the sequential recommendation, scientific paper embeddings, measurement of sentence similarity, distantly supervised relation extraction, unsupervised text pattern entailment detection, and cold-start citation recommendation. Finally, we use the multiple vector embeddings to predict the future topics of a context, and build on the basis, we propose a novel interactive language generation framework
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