11,369 research outputs found
WikiM: Metapaths based Wikification of Scientific Abstracts
In order to disseminate the exponential extent of knowledge being produced in
the form of scientific publications, it would be best to design mechanisms that
connect it with already existing rich repository of concepts -- the Wikipedia.
Not only does it make scientific reading simple and easy (by connecting the
involved concepts used in the scientific articles to their Wikipedia
explanations) but also improves the overall quality of the article. In this
paper, we present a novel metapath based method, WikiM, to efficiently wikify
scientific abstracts -- a topic that has been rarely investigated in the
literature. One of the prime motivations for this work comes from the
observation that, wikified abstracts of scientific documents help a reader to
decide better, in comparison to the plain abstracts, whether (s)he would be
interested to read the full article. We perform mention extraction mostly
through traditional tf-idf measures coupled with a set of smart filters. The
entity linking heavily leverages on the rich citation and author publication
networks. Our observation is that various metapaths defined over these networks
can significantly enhance the overall performance of the system. For mention
extraction and entity linking, we outperform most of the competing
state-of-the-art techniques by a large margin arriving at precision values of
72.42% and 73.8% respectively over a dataset from the ACL Anthology Network. In
order to establish the robustness of our scheme, we wikify three other datasets
and get precision values of 63.41%-94.03% and 67.67%-73.29% respectively for
the mention extraction and the entity linking phase
A Topic Recommender for Journalists
The way in which people acquire information on events and form their own
opinion on them has changed dramatically with the advent of social media. For many
readers, the news gathered from online sources become an opportunity to share points
of view and information within micro-blogging platforms such as Twitter, mainly
aimed at satisfying their communication needs. Furthermore, the need to deepen the
aspects related to news stimulates a demand for additional information which is often
met through online encyclopedias, such as Wikipedia. This behaviour has also
influenced the way in which journalists write their articles, requiring a careful assessment
of what actually interests the readers. The goal of this paper is to present
a recommender system, What to Write and Why, capable of suggesting to a journalist,
for a given event, the aspects still uncovered in news articles on which the
readers focus their interest. The basic idea is to characterize an event according to
the echo it receives in online news sources and associate it with the corresponding
readers’ communicative and informative patterns, detected through the analysis of
Twitter and Wikipedia, respectively. Our methodology temporally aligns the results
of this analysis and recommends the concepts that emerge as topics of interest from
Twitter and Wikipedia, either not covered or poorly covered in the published news
articles
Dublin City University at QA@CLEF 2008
We describe our participation in Multilingual Question Answering at CLEF 2008 using German and English as our source and target languages respectively. The system was built using UIMA (Unstructured Information Management Architecture) as underlying framework
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