14,844 research outputs found
Bots increase exposure to negative and inflammatory content in online social systems
Societies are complex systems which tend to polarize into sub-groups of
individuals with dramatically opposite perspectives. This phenomenon is
reflected -- and often amplified -- in online social networks where, however,
humans are no more the only players, and co-exist alongside with social bots,
i.e., software-controlled accounts. Analyzing large-scale social data collected
during the Catalan referendum for independence on October 1, 2017, consisting
of nearly 4 millions Twitter posts generated by almost 1 million users, we
identify the two polarized groups of Independentists and Constitutionalists and
quantify the structural and emotional roles played by social bots. We show that
bots act from peripheral areas of the social system to target influential
humans of both groups, bombarding Independentists with violent contents,
increasing their exposure to negative and inflammatory narratives and
exacerbating social conflict online. Our findings stress the importance of
developing countermeasures to unmask these forms of automated social
manipulation.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Ethical Challenges in Data-Driven Dialogue Systems
The use of dialogue systems as a medium for human-machine interaction is an
increasingly prevalent paradigm. A growing number of dialogue systems use
conversation strategies that are learned from large datasets. There are well
documented instances where interactions with these system have resulted in
biased or even offensive conversations due to the data-driven training process.
Here, we highlight potential ethical issues that arise in dialogue systems
research, including: implicit biases in data-driven systems, the rise of
adversarial examples, potential sources of privacy violations, safety concerns,
special considerations for reinforcement learning systems, and reproducibility
concerns. We also suggest areas stemming from these issues that deserve further
investigation. Through this initial survey, we hope to spur research leading to
robust, safe, and ethically sound dialogue systems.Comment: In Submission to the AAAI/ACM conference on Artificial Intelligence,
Ethics, and Societ
Sex differences in HIV effects on visual memory among substance-dependent individuals
HIVâs effects on episodic memory have not been compared systematically between male and female substance-dependent individuals. We administered the Brief Visuospatial Memory TestâRevised (BVMTâR) to 280 substance-dependent HIV+ and HIVâ men and women. Groups were comparable on demographic, substance use, and comorbid characteristics. There were no significant main effects of sex or HIV serostatus on BVMTâR performance, but HIV+ women performed significantly more poorly on delayed recall. This effect was most prominent among cocaine-dependent HIV+ women. Our findings are consistent with recent speculation that memory impairment may be more common among HIV+ women, particularly those with a history of cocaine dependence
Living Knowledge
Diversity, especially manifested in language and knowledge, is a function of local goals, needs, competences, beliefs, culture, opinions and personal experience. The Living Knowledge project considers diversity as an asset rather than a problem. With the project, foundational ideas emerged from the synergic contribution of different disciplines, methodologies (with which many partners were previously unfamiliar) and technologies flowed in concrete diversity-aware applications such as the Future Predictor and the Media Content Analyser providing users with better structured information while coping with Web scale complexities. The key notions of diversity, fact, opinion and bias have been defined in relation to three methodologies: Media Content Analysis (MCA) which operates from a social sciences perspective; Multimodal Genre Analysis (MGA) which operates from a semiotic perspective and Facet Analysis (FA) which operates from a knowledge representation and organization perspective. A conceptual architecture that pulls all of them together has become the core of the tools for automatic extraction and the way they interact. In particular, the conceptual architecture has been implemented with the Media Content Analyser application. The scientific and technological results obtained are described in the following
Secondary predication in Russian
The paper makes two contributions to semantic typology of secondary predicates. It provides an explanation of the fact that Russian has no resultative secondary predicates, relating this explanation to the interpretation of secondary predicates in English. And it relates depictive secondary predicates in Russian, which usually occur in the instrumental case, to other uses of the instrumental case in Russian, establishing here, too, a difference to English concerning the scope of the secondary predication phenomenon
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