79 research outputs found
Knowledge representation and text mining in biomedical, healthcare, and political domains
Knowledge representation and text mining can be employed to discover new knowledge and develop services by using the massive amounts of text gathered by modern information systems. The applied methods should take into account the domain-specific nature of knowledge. This thesis explores knowledge representation and text mining in three application domains.
Biomolecular events can be described very precisely and concisely with appropriate representation schemes. Proteinâprotein interactions are commonly modelled in biological databases as binary relationships, whereas the complex relationships used in text mining are rich in information. The experimental results of this thesis show that complex relationships can be reduced to binary relationships and that it is possible to reconstruct complex relationships from mixtures of linguistically similar relationships. This encourages the extraction of complex relationships from the scientific literature even if binary relationships are required by the application at hand. The experimental results on cross-validation schemes for pair-input data help to understand how existing knowledge regarding dependent instances (such those concerning proteinâprotein pairs) can be leveraged to improve the generalisation performance estimates of learned models.
Healthcare documents and news articles contain knowledge that is more difficult to model than biomolecular events and tend to have larger vocabularies than biomedical scientific articles. This thesis describes an ontology that models patient education documents and their content in order to improve the availability and quality of such documents. The experimental results of this thesis also show that the Recall-Oriented Understudy for Gisting Evaluation measures are a viable option for the automatic evaluation of textual patient record summarisation methods and that the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve can be used in a large-scale sentiment analysis. The sentiment analysis of Reuters news corpora suggests that the Western mainstream media portrays China negatively in politics-related articles but not in general, which provides new evidence to consider in the debate over the image of China in the Western media
Gaining Insight into Determinants of Physical Activity using Bayesian Network Learning
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Mining Meaning from Wikipedia
Wikipedia is a goldmine of information; not just for its many readers, but
also for the growing community of researchers who recognize it as a resource of
exceptional scale and utility. It represents a vast investment of manual effort
and judgment: a huge, constantly evolving tapestry of concepts and relations
that is being applied to a host of tasks.
This article provides a comprehensive description of this work. It focuses on
research that extracts and makes use of the concepts, relations, facts and
descriptions found in Wikipedia, and organizes the work into four broad
categories: applying Wikipedia to natural language processing; using it to
facilitate information retrieval and information extraction; and as a resource
for ontology building. The article addresses how Wikipedia is being used as is,
how it is being improved and adapted, and how it is being combined with other
structures to create entirely new resources. We identify the research groups
and individuals involved, and how their work has developed in the last few
years. We provide a comprehensive list of the open-source software they have
produced.Comment: An extensive survey of re-using information in Wikipedia in natural
language processing, information retrieval and extraction and ontology
building. Accepted for publication in International Journal of Human-Computer
Studie
Mapping (Dis-)Information Flow about the MH17 Plane Crash
Digital media enables not only fast sharing of information, but also
disinformation. One prominent case of an event leading to circulation of
disinformation on social media is the MH17 plane crash. Studies analysing the
spread of information about this event on Twitter have focused on small,
manually annotated datasets, or used proxys for data annotation. In this work,
we examine to what extent text classifiers can be used to label data for
subsequent content analysis, in particular we focus on predicting pro-Russian
and pro-Ukrainian Twitter content related to the MH17 plane crash. Even though
we find that a neural classifier improves over a hashtag based baseline,
labeling pro-Russian and pro-Ukrainian content with high precision remains a
challenging problem. We provide an error analysis underlining the difficulty of
the task and identify factors that might help improve classification in future
work. Finally, we show how the classifier can facilitate the annotation task
for human annotators
Proceedings of the Seventh Italian Conference on Computational Linguistics CLiC-it 2020
On behalf of the Program Committee, a very warm welcome to the Seventh Italian Conference on Computational Linguistics (CLiC-it 2020). This edition of the conference is held in Bologna and organised by the University of Bologna. The CLiC-it conference series is an initiative of the Italian Association for Computational Linguistics (AILC) which, after six years of activity, has clearly established itself as the premier national forum for research and development in the fields of Computational Linguistics and Natural Language Processing, where leading researchers and practitioners from academia and industry meet to share their research results, experiences, and challenges
Multimedia Forensics
This book is open access. Media forensics has never been more relevant to societal life. Not only media content represents an ever-increasing share of the data traveling on the net and the preferred communications means for most users, it has also become integral part of most innovative applications in the digital information ecosystem that serves various sectors of society, from the entertainment, to journalism, to politics. Undoubtedly, the advances in deep learning and computational imaging contributed significantly to this outcome. The underlying technologies that drive this trend, however, also pose a profound challenge in establishing trust in what we see, hear, and read, and make media content the preferred target of malicious attacks. In this new threat landscape powered by innovative imaging technologies and sophisticated tools, based on autoencoders and generative adversarial networks, this book fills an important gap. It presents a comprehensive review of state-of-the-art forensics capabilities that relate to media attribution, integrity and authenticity verification, and counter forensics. Its content is developed to provide practitioners, researchers, photo and video enthusiasts, and students a holistic view of the field
Exploring Novel Datasets and Methods for the Study of False Information
False information has increasingly become a subject of much discussion. Recently, disinformation has been linked to causing massive social harm, leading to the decline of democracy, and hindering global efforts in an international health crisis. In computing, and specifically Natural Language Processing (NLP), much effort has been put into tackling this problem. This has led to an increase of research in automated fact-checking and the language of disinformation. However, current research suffers from looking at a limited variety of sources. Much focus has, understandably, been given to platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and WhatsApp, as well as on traditional news articles online. Few works in NLP have looked at the specific communities where false information ferments. There has also been something of a topical constraint, with most examples of âFake Newsâ relating to current political issues. This thesis contributes to this rapidly growing research area by looking wider for new sources of data, and developing methods to analyse them. Specifically, it introduces two new datasets to the field and performs analyses on both. The first of these, a corpus of April Fools hoaxes, is analysed with a feature-driven approach to examine the generalisability of different features in the classification of false information. This is the first corpus of April Fools news articles, and is publicly available for researchers. The second dataset, a corpus of online Flat Earth communities, is also the first of its kind. In addition to performing the first NLP analysis of the language of Flat Earth fora, an exploration is performed to look for the existence of sub-groups within these communities, as well as an analysis of language change. To support this analysis, language change methods are surveyed, and a new method for comparing the language change of groups over time is developed. The methods used, brought together from both NLP and Corpus Linguistics, provide new insight into the language of false information, and the way communities discuss it
Multimedia Forensics
This book is open access. Media forensics has never been more relevant to societal life. Not only media content represents an ever-increasing share of the data traveling on the net and the preferred communications means for most users, it has also become integral part of most innovative applications in the digital information ecosystem that serves various sectors of society, from the entertainment, to journalism, to politics. Undoubtedly, the advances in deep learning and computational imaging contributed significantly to this outcome. The underlying technologies that drive this trend, however, also pose a profound challenge in establishing trust in what we see, hear, and read, and make media content the preferred target of malicious attacks. In this new threat landscape powered by innovative imaging technologies and sophisticated tools, based on autoencoders and generative adversarial networks, this book fills an important gap. It presents a comprehensive review of state-of-the-art forensics capabilities that relate to media attribution, integrity and authenticity verification, and counter forensics. Its content is developed to provide practitioners, researchers, photo and video enthusiasts, and students a holistic view of the field
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