28,693 research outputs found
Network Model Selection for Task-Focused Attributed Network Inference
Networks are models representing relationships between entities. Often these
relationships are explicitly given, or we must learn a representation which
generalizes and predicts observed behavior in underlying individual data (e.g.
attributes or labels). Whether given or inferred, choosing the best
representation affects subsequent tasks and questions on the network. This work
focuses on model selection to evaluate network representations from data,
focusing on fundamental predictive tasks on networks. We present a modular
methodology using general, interpretable network models, task neighborhood
functions found across domains, and several criteria for robust model
selection. We demonstrate our methodology on three online user activity
datasets and show that network model selection for the appropriate network task
vs. an alternate task increases performance by an order of magnitude in our
experiments
Building a Document Genre Corpus: a Profile of the KRYS I Corpus
This paper describes the KRYS I corpus (http://www.krys-corpus.eu/Info.html), consisting of documents classified into 70 genre classes. It has been constructed as part of an effort to automate document genre classification as distinct from topic detection. Previously there has been very little work on building corpora of texts which have been classified using a non-topical genre palette. The reason for this is partly due to the fact that genre as a concept, is rooted in philosophy, rhetoric and literature, and highly complex and domain dependent in its interpretation ([11]). The usefulness of genre in everyday information search is only now starting to be recognised and there is no genre classification schema that has been consolidated to have applicable value in this direction. By presenting here our experiences in constructing the KRYS I corpus, we hope to shed light on the information gathering and seeking behaviour and the role of genre in these activities, as well as a way forward for creating a better corpus for testing automated genre classification tasks and the application of these tasks to other domains
The Latin Music Database
In this paper we present the Latin Music Database, a novel database of Latin musical recordings which has been developed for automatic music genre classification, but can also be used in other music information retrieval tasks. The method for assigning genres to the musical recordings is based on human expert perception and therefore capture their tacit knowledge in the genre labeling process. We also present the ethnomusicology of the genres available in the database as it might provide important information for the analysis of the results of any experiment that employs the database
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