13,484 research outputs found
A Survey of Location Prediction on Twitter
Locations, e.g., countries, states, cities, and point-of-interests, are
central to news, emergency events, and people's daily lives. Automatic
identification of locations associated with or mentioned in documents has been
explored for decades. As one of the most popular online social network
platforms, Twitter has attracted a large number of users who send millions of
tweets on daily basis. Due to the world-wide coverage of its users and
real-time freshness of tweets, location prediction on Twitter has gained
significant attention in recent years. Research efforts are spent on dealing
with new challenges and opportunities brought by the noisy, short, and
context-rich nature of tweets. In this survey, we aim at offering an overall
picture of location prediction on Twitter. Specifically, we concentrate on the
prediction of user home locations, tweet locations, and mentioned locations. We
first define the three tasks and review the evaluation metrics. By summarizing
Twitter network, tweet content, and tweet context as potential inputs, we then
structurally highlight how the problems depend on these inputs. Each dependency
is illustrated by a comprehensive review of the corresponding strategies
adopted in state-of-the-art approaches. In addition, we also briefly review two
related problems, i.e., semantic location prediction and point-of-interest
recommendation. Finally, we list future research directions.Comment: Accepted to TKDE. 30 pages, 1 figur
Hierarchical Losses and New Resources for Fine-grained Entity Typing and Linking
Extraction from raw text to a knowledge base of entities and fine-grained
types is often cast as prediction into a flat set of entity and type labels,
neglecting the rich hierarchies over types and entities contained in curated
ontologies. Previous attempts to incorporate hierarchical structure have
yielded little benefit and are restricted to shallow ontologies. This paper
presents new methods using real and complex bilinear mappings for integrating
hierarchical information, yielding substantial improvement over flat
predictions in entity linking and fine-grained entity typing, and achieving new
state-of-the-art results for end-to-end models on the benchmark FIGER dataset.
We also present two new human-annotated datasets containing wide and deep
hierarchies which we will release to the community to encourage further
research in this direction: MedMentions, a collection of PubMed abstracts in
which 246k mentions have been mapped to the massive UMLS ontology; and TypeNet,
which aligns Freebase types with the WordNet hierarchy to obtain nearly 2k
entity types. In experiments on all three datasets we show substantial gains
from hierarchy-aware training.Comment: ACL 201
MAG: A Multilingual, Knowledge-base Agnostic and Deterministic Entity Linking Approach
Entity linking has recently been the subject of a significant body of
research. Currently, the best performing approaches rely on trained
mono-lingual models. Porting these approaches to other languages is
consequently a difficult endeavor as it requires corresponding training data
and retraining of the models. We address this drawback by presenting a novel
multilingual, knowledge-based agnostic and deterministic approach to entity
linking, dubbed MAG. MAG is based on a combination of context-based retrieval
on structured knowledge bases and graph algorithms. We evaluate MAG on 23 data
sets and in 7 languages. Our results show that the best approach trained on
English datasets (PBOH) achieves a micro F-measure that is up to 4 times worse
on datasets in other languages. MAG, on the other hand, achieves
state-of-the-art performance on English datasets and reaches a micro F-measure
that is up to 0.6 higher than that of PBOH on non-English languages.Comment: Accepted in K-CAP 2017: Knowledge Capture Conferenc
Event-based Access to Historical Italian War Memoirs
The progressive digitization of historical archives provides new, often
domain specific, textual resources that report on facts and events which have
happened in the past; among these, memoirs are a very common type of primary
source. In this paper, we present an approach for extracting information from
Italian historical war memoirs and turning it into structured knowledge. This
is based on the semantic notions of events, participants and roles. We evaluate
quantitatively each of the key-steps of our approach and provide a graph-based
representation of the extracted knowledge, which allows to move between a Close
and a Distant Reading of the collection.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure
Fine-Grained News Classification
This thesis investigates the concepts of fine-grained news classification. To do this, an empirical study in which human annotators categorized news was conducted. The also study consisted of measuring agreement between hu- man annotators and evaluating the precision of the annotations. The study revealed a need for a framework for fine-grained news classification. A framework was then developed and evaluated, producing a complete annotated dataset.Masteroppgave i informasjonsvitenskapINFO390MASV-INF
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