5,479 research outputs found
Ordering-sensitive and Semantic-aware Topic Modeling
Topic modeling of textual corpora is an important and challenging problem. In
most previous work, the "bag-of-words" assumption is usually made which ignores
the ordering of words. This assumption simplifies the computation, but it
unrealistically loses the ordering information and the semantic of words in the
context. In this paper, we present a Gaussian Mixture Neural Topic Model
(GMNTM) which incorporates both the ordering of words and the semantic meaning
of sentences into topic modeling. Specifically, we represent each topic as a
cluster of multi-dimensional vectors and embed the corpus into a collection of
vectors generated by the Gaussian mixture model. Each word is affected not only
by its topic, but also by the embedding vector of its surrounding words and the
context. The Gaussian mixture components and the topic of documents, sentences
and words can be learnt jointly. Extensive experiments show that our model can
learn better topics and more accurate word distributions for each topic.
Quantitatively, comparing to state-of-the-art topic modeling approaches, GMNTM
obtains significantly better performance in terms of perplexity, retrieval
accuracy and classification accuracy.Comment: To appear in proceedings of AAAI 201
Data-Driven Shape Analysis and Processing
Data-driven methods play an increasingly important role in discovering
geometric, structural, and semantic relationships between 3D shapes in
collections, and applying this analysis to support intelligent modeling,
editing, and visualization of geometric data. In contrast to traditional
approaches, a key feature of data-driven approaches is that they aggregate
information from a collection of shapes to improve the analysis and processing
of individual shapes. In addition, they are able to learn models that reason
about properties and relationships of shapes without relying on hard-coded
rules or explicitly programmed instructions. We provide an overview of the main
concepts and components of these techniques, and discuss their application to
shape classification, segmentation, matching, reconstruction, modeling and
exploration, as well as scene analysis and synthesis, through reviewing the
literature and relating the existing works with both qualitative and numerical
comparisons. We conclude our report with ideas that can inspire future research
in data-driven shape analysis and processing.Comment: 10 pages, 19 figure
Mind the Gap: Another look at the problem of the semantic gap in image retrieval
This paper attempts to review and characterise the problem of the semantic gap in image retrieval and the attempts being made to bridge it. In particular, we draw from our own experience in user queries, automatic annotation and ontological techniques. The first section of the paper describes a characterisation of the semantic gap as a hierarchy between the raw media and full semantic understanding of the media's content. The second section discusses real users' queries with respect to the semantic gap. The final sections of the paper describe our own experience in attempting to bridge the semantic gap. In particular we discuss our work on auto-annotation and semantic-space models of image retrieval in order to bridge the gap from the bottom up, and the use of ontologies, which capture more semantics than keyword object labels alone, as a technique for bridging the gap from the top down
Grounding semantics in robots for Visual Question Answering
In this thesis I describe an operational implementation of an object detection and description system that incorporates in an end-to-end Visual Question Answering system and evaluated it on two visual question answering datasets for compositional language and elementary visual reasoning
Temporal Cross-Media Retrieval with Soft-Smoothing
Multimedia information have strong temporal correlations that shape the way
modalities co-occur over time. In this paper we study the dynamic nature of
multimedia and social-media information, where the temporal dimension emerges
as a strong source of evidence for learning the temporal correlations across
visual and textual modalities. So far, cross-media retrieval models, explored
the correlations between different modalities (e.g. text and image) to learn a
common subspace, in which semantically similar instances lie in the same
neighbourhood. Building on such knowledge, we propose a novel temporal
cross-media neural architecture, that departs from standard cross-media
methods, by explicitly accounting for the temporal dimension through temporal
subspace learning. The model is softly-constrained with temporal and
inter-modality constraints that guide the new subspace learning task by
favouring temporal correlations between semantically similar and temporally
close instances. Experiments on three distinct datasets show that accounting
for time turns out to be important for cross-media retrieval. Namely, the
proposed method outperforms a set of baselines on the task of temporal
cross-media retrieval, demonstrating its effectiveness for performing temporal
subspace learning.Comment: To appear in ACM MM 201
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