46 research outputs found

    The Role of Document Structure and Citation Analysis in Literature Information Retrieval

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    Literature Information Retrieval (IR) is the task of searching relevant publications given a particular information need expressed as a set of queries. With the staggering growth of scientific literature, it is critical to design effective retrieval solutions to facilitate efficient access to them. We hypothesize that particular genre specific characteristics of scientific literature such as metadata and citations are potentially helpful for enhancing scientific literature search. We conducted systematic and extensive IR experiments on open information retrieval test collections to investigate their roles in enhancing literature information retrieval effectiveness. This thesis consists of three major parts of studies. First, we examined the role of document structure in literature search through comprehensive studies on the retrieval effectiveness of a set of structure-aware retrieval models on ad hoc scientific literature search tasks. Second, under the language modeling retrieval framework, we studied exploiting citation and co-citation analysis results as sources of evidence for enhancing literature search. Specifically, we examined relevant document distribution patterns over partitioned clusters of document citation and co-citation graphs; we examined seven ways of modeling document prior probabilities of being relevant based on document citation and co-citation analysis; we studied the effectiveness of boosting retrieved documents with scores of their neighborhood documents in terms co-citation counts, co-citation similarities and Howard White's pennant scores. Third, we combined both structured retrieval features and citation related features in developing machine learned retrieval models for literatures search and assessed the effectiveness of learning to rank algorithms and various literature-specific features. Our major findings are as follows. State-of-the-art structure-ware retrieval models though reportedly perform well in known item finding tasks do not significantly outperform non-fielded baseline retrieval models in ad hoc literature information retrieval. Though relevant document distributions over citation and co-citation network graph partitions reveal favorable pattern, citation and co-citation analysis results on the current iSearch test collection only modestly improve retrieval effectiveness. However, priors derived from co-citation analysis outperform that derived from citation analysis, and pennant score for document expansion outperforms raw co-citation count or cosine similarity of co-citation counts. Our learning to rank experiments show that in a heterogeneous collection setting, citation related features can significantly outperform baselines.Ph.D., Information Studies -- Drexel University, 201

    A Correlation Study of Co-opinion and Co-citation Similarity Measures

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    Co-citation forms a relational document network. Co-citation-based measures are found to be effective in retrieving relevant documents. However, they are far from ideal and need further enhancements. Co-opinion concept was proposed and tested in previous research and found to be effective in retrieving relevant documents. The present study endeavors to explore the correlation between opinion (dis)similarity measures and the traditional co-citation-based ones including Citation Proximity Index (CPI), co-citedness and co-citation context similarity. The results show significant, though weak to medium, correlations between the variables. The correlations are direct for co-opinion measure, while being inverse for the opinion distance. Accordingly, the two groups of measures are revealed to represent some similar aspects of the document relation. Moreover, the weakness of the correlations implies that there are different dimensions represented by the two group

    Big Data and Artificial Intelligence in Digital Finance

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    This open access book presents how cutting-edge digital technologies like Big Data, Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Blockchain are set to disrupt the financial sector. The book illustrates how recent advances in these technologies facilitate banks, FinTech, and financial institutions to collect, process, analyze, and fully leverage the very large amounts of data that are nowadays produced and exchanged in the sector. To this end, the book also describes some more the most popular Big Data, AI and Blockchain applications in the sector, including novel applications in the areas of Know Your Customer (KYC), Personalized Wealth Management and Asset Management, Portfolio Risk Assessment, as well as variety of novel Usage-based Insurance applications based on Internet-of-Things data. Most of the presented applications have been developed, deployed and validated in real-life digital finance settings in the context of the European Commission funded INFINITECH project, which is a flagship innovation initiative for Big Data and AI in digital finance. This book is ideal for researchers and practitioners in Big Data, AI, banking and digital finance

    What CIOs and CTOs Need to Know About Big Data and Data-Intensive Computing

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    This paper was completed as part of the final research component in the University of Oregon Applied Information Management Master's Degree Program [see htpp://aim.uoregon.edu].The nature of business computing is changing due to the proliferation of massive data sets referred to as big data, that can be used to produce business analytics (Borkar, Carey, & Li, 2012). This annotated bibliography presents literature published between 2000 and 2012. It provides information to CIOs and CTOs about big data by: (a) identifying business examples, (b) describing the relationship to data-intensive computing, (c) exploring opportunities and limitations, and (d) identifying cost factors

    Big Data and Artificial Intelligence in Digital Finance

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    This open access book presents how cutting-edge digital technologies like Big Data, Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Blockchain are set to disrupt the financial sector. The book illustrates how recent advances in these technologies facilitate banks, FinTech, and financial institutions to collect, process, analyze, and fully leverage the very large amounts of data that are nowadays produced and exchanged in the sector. To this end, the book also describes some more the most popular Big Data, AI and Blockchain applications in the sector, including novel applications in the areas of Know Your Customer (KYC), Personalized Wealth Management and Asset Management, Portfolio Risk Assessment, as well as variety of novel Usage-based Insurance applications based on Internet-of-Things data. Most of the presented applications have been developed, deployed and validated in real-life digital finance settings in the context of the European Commission funded INFINITECH project, which is a flagship innovation initiative for Big Data and AI in digital finance. This book is ideal for researchers and practitioners in Big Data, AI, banking and digital finance

    8th SC@RUG 2011 proceedings:Student Colloquium 2010-2011

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