17,597 research outputs found
The contribution of data mining to information science
The information explosion is a serious challenge for current information institutions. On the other hand, data mining, which is the search for valuable information in large volumes of data, is one of the solutions to face this challenge. In the past several years, data mining has made a significant contribution to the field of information science. This paper examines the impact of data mining by reviewing existing applications, including personalized environments, electronic commerce, and search engines. For these three types of application, how data mining can enhance their functions is discussed. The reader of this paper is expected to get an overview of the state of the art research associated with these applications. Furthermore, we identify the limitations of current work and raise several directions for future research
Structured Review of Code Clone Literature
This report presents the results of a structured review of code clone literature. The aim of the review is to assemble a conceptual model of clone-related concepts which helps us to reason about clones. This conceptual model unifies clone concepts from a wide range of literature, so that findings about clones can be compared with each other
Automated construction and analysis of political networks via open government and media sources
We present a tool to generate real world political networks from user provided lists of politicians and news sites. Additional output includes visualizations, interactive tools and maps that allow a user to better understand the politicians and their surrounding environments as portrayed by the media. As a case study, we construct a comprehensive list of current Texas politicians, select news sites that convey a spectrum of political viewpoints covering Texas politics, and examine the results. We propose a ”Combined” co-occurrence distance metric to better reflect the relationship between two entities. A topic modeling technique is also proposed as a novel, automated way of labeling communities that exist within a politician’s ”extended” network.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Multiple Instance Learning: A Survey of Problem Characteristics and Applications
Multiple instance learning (MIL) is a form of weakly supervised learning
where training instances are arranged in sets, called bags, and a label is
provided for the entire bag. This formulation is gaining interest because it
naturally fits various problems and allows to leverage weakly labeled data.
Consequently, it has been used in diverse application fields such as computer
vision and document classification. However, learning from bags raises
important challenges that are unique to MIL. This paper provides a
comprehensive survey of the characteristics which define and differentiate the
types of MIL problems. Until now, these problem characteristics have not been
formally identified and described. As a result, the variations in performance
of MIL algorithms from one data set to another are difficult to explain. In
this paper, MIL problem characteristics are grouped into four broad categories:
the composition of the bags, the types of data distribution, the ambiguity of
instance labels, and the task to be performed. Methods specialized to address
each category are reviewed. Then, the extent to which these characteristics
manifest themselves in key MIL application areas are described. Finally,
experiments are conducted to compare the performance of 16 state-of-the-art MIL
methods on selected problem characteristics. This paper provides insight on how
the problem characteristics affect MIL algorithms, recommendations for future
benchmarking and promising avenues for research
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