6,061 research outputs found

    A Supervised Approach for Sentiment Analysis using Skipgrams and its Application to Sentiment Visualisation in Social Media

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    In this Ph.D. thesis we propose, as fundamental research, the design, development and evaluation of a supervised approach for sentiment analysis. This work is based on the hypothesis that an efficient use of the skipgram modelling can improve sentiment analysis tasks and reduce the resources they need. In summary, it consists on a supervised approach that uses machine learning techniques and skipgrams as information units, mainly focused on skipgram selection and filtering. This approach will be evaluated and compared to current state-of-the-art techniques. In addition, as applied research we propose a sentiment visualisation tool, strongly integrated with our sentiment analysis approach. This tool is oriented in the context of social media, measuring reputation and user interactions in real time.This research work has been partially funded by Generalitat Valenciana through project “SIIA: Tecnologías del lenguaje humano para una sociedad inclusiva, igualitaria, y accesible" with grant reference PROMETEU/2018/089, and by the Spanish Government and FEDER through the project RTI2018-094653-B-C22: “Modelang: Modeling the behavior of digital entities by Human Language Technologies" (“LIVING-LANG: Living Digital Entities by Human Language Technologies")

    A Supervised Approach for Sentiment Lexicon Generation using Word Skipgrams

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    This Ph.D. thesis work proposes the design, development and evaluation of a supervised approach for sentiment lexicon generation. It is based on the hypothesis that an efficient use of the skipgram modelling can improve sentiment analysis tasks and reduce the resources needed maintaining an acceptable level of quality. In summary, the novelty of this approach lies in the use of skipgrams as information units and the way they are efficiently generated, weighed and filtered, taking advantage of the useful information they provide about the sequentiality of the language.This research work has been supported by TRIVIAL (PID2021-122263OB-C22) funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by “European Union Regional Development Fund (ERDF) A way of making Europe”, by the “European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR”

    Mercury: using the QuPreSS reference model to evaluate predictive services

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    Nowadays, lots of service providers offer predictive services that show in advance a condition or occurrence about the future. As a consequence, it becomes necessary for service customers to select the predictive service that best satisfies their needs. The QuPreSS reference model provides a standard solution for the selection of predictive services based on the quality of their predictions. QuPreSS has been designed to be applicable in any predictive domain (e.g., weather forecasting, economics, and medicine). This paper presents Mercury, a tool based on the QuPreSS reference model and customized to the weather forecast domain. Mercury measures weather predictive services' quality, and automates the context-dependent selection of the most accurate predictive service to satisfy a customer query. To do so, candidate predictive services are monitored so that their predictions can be eventually compared to real observations obtained from a trusted source. Mercury is a proof-of-concept of QuPreSS that aims to show that the selection of predictive services can be driven by the quality of their predictions. Throughout the paper, we show how Mercury was built from the QuPreSS reference model and how it can be installed and used.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    RDF-TR: Exploiting structural redundancies to boost RDF compression

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    The number and volume of semantic data have grown impressively over the last decade, promoting compression as an essential tool for RDF preservation, sharing and management. In contrast to universal compressors, RDF compression techniques are able to detect and exploit specific forms of redundancy in RDF data. Thus, state-of-the-art RDF compressors excel at exploiting syntactic and semantic redundancies, i.e., repetitions in the serialization format and information that can be inferred implicitly. However, little attention has been paid to the existence of structural patterns within the RDF dataset; i.e. structural redundancy. In this paper, we analyze structural regularities in real-world datasets, and show three schema-based sources of redundancies that underpin the schema-relaxed nature of RDF. Then, we propose RDF-Tr (RDF Triples Reorganizer), a preprocessing technique that discovers and removes this kind of redundancy before the RDF dataset is effectively compressed. In particular, RDF-Tr groups subjects that are described by the same predicates, and locally re-codes the objects related to these predicates. Finally, we integrate RDF-Tr with two RDF compressors, HDT and k2-triples. Our experiments show that using RDF-Tr with these compressors improves by up to 2.3 times their original effectiveness, outperforming the most prominent state-of-the-art techniques

    Towards guidelines for building a business case and gathering evidence of software reference architectures in industry

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    Background: Software reference architectures are becoming widely adopted by organizations that need to support the design and maintenance of software applications of a shared domain. For organizations that plan to adopt this architecture-centric approach, it becomes fundamental to know the return on investment and to understand how software reference architectures are designed, maintained, and used. Unfortunately, there is little evidence-based support to help organizations with these challenges. Methods: We have conducted action research in an industry-academia collaboration between the GESSI research group and everis, a multinational IT consulting firm based in Spain. Results: The results from such collaboration are being packaged in order to create guidelines that could be used in similar contexts as the one of everis. The main result of this paper is the construction of empirically-grounded guidelines that support organizations to decide on the adoption of software reference architectures and to gather evidence to improve RA-related practices. Conclusions: The created guidelines could be used by other organizations outside of our industry-academia collaboration. With this goal in mind, we describe the guidelines in detail for their use.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Acoplamiento flexible de seguridad frente a impactos

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    Número de publicación: ES2470915 A1 (24.06.2014) También publicado como: ES2470915 B2 (20.01.2015) Número de Solicitud: Consulta de Expedientes OEPM (C.E.O.) P201300030 (21.12.2012)Acoplamiento flexible de seguridad frente a impactos, del tipo de los utilizados en eslabones de brazos robóticos y que incorporan algún mecanismo que permite variar el nivel de carga a partir del cual entra en funcionamiento la flexibilidad del acoplamiento. El acoplamiento incorpora una pieza (1) y una pieza (2) cilíndricas huevas enfrentadas por sus bases, las cuales disponen de una multitud de hendiduras (5) y protuberancias (6) que insertan perfectamente. Un resorte helicoidal (3) apoya en la cara interior de la base de la pieza (1) y en el otro extremo del resorte (3) se fija el extremo de un cable (8), el cual atraviesa las bases de las piezas (1) y (2). El otro extremo del cable (8) se fija a la cabeza de un tornillo (7) roscado a la base de la pieza (2) y que permite tensar el cable (8) y comprimir el resorte (3).Universidad de Almerí

    The Intelligent Web

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    Many people are working on the Semantic Web with the main objective being to enhance web searches. Our proposal is a new research strategy based on the existence of a discrete set of semantic relations for the creation and exploitation of semantic networks on the web. To do so, we have defined in a previous paper (Álamo, Martínez, Jaén) the Rhetoric-Semantic Relation (RSR) based on the results of the Rhetoric Structure Theory. We formulate a general set of RSR capable of building discourse and making it possible to express any concept, procedure or principle in terms of knowledge nodes and RSRs. These knowledge nodes can then be elaborated in the same way. This network structure in terms of RSR makes the objective of developing automatic answering systems possible as well as any other type of utilities oriented towards the exploitation of semantic structure, such as the automatic production of web pages or automatic e-learning generation

    Didactic Networks and exemplification

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    After a general overview in a previous paper [AMJ10b], in which we proposed Didactic Networks (DN) as a new way for developing and exploiting web-learning content, we offer here a deeper study showing how to use them for web-learning design and content generation based on Instructional Theory with the coherence guaranty of the RST [MT99]. By using a set of expressivity patterns, it is possible to obtain different final ¿products¿ from the DNs such as different level or different aspect web-learning lessons, depending on the target, documents or evaluation tests. In parallel we are defining the Fundamental Cognitive Networks (FCN), in which we deal with the most common patterns human being uses to think and communicate ideas. This FCN set reuses the representation of Concepts, Procedures and Principles defined here, and it is the main topic of a paper we are working on for the very near future
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