254 research outputs found

    Completion of the restructuring of China\u27s coast guard administration: challenges and opportunities

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    The dissertation is a study of the restructuring activities of entities of China’s maritime law enforcement by focusing on the establishment of China’s Coast Guard Administration. Because China’s Coast Guard Administration was just established two years ago, the aim of this dissertation is to analyse the current situation of China’s Coast Guard Administration, and then identify and analyse challenges and opportunities in China’s Coast Guard Administration. In order to provide a comprehensive cognition of the reasons for establishing China’s Coast Guard Administration, the dissertation initially provides a brief explanation of the drawbacks of the past situation of entities of maritime law enforcement in China. Then the current situation of China’s Coast Guard Administration is analysed by stating the framework and initial mandates of China’s Coast Guard Administration. Importantly, the legal foundations for previous departments are analysed and some of them are still available for China’s Coast Guard Administration. The legal analysis is divided into two levels, which are international laws and domestic laws. Significantly, a vast number of challenges faced by China’s Coast Guard Administration are identified and analysed by internal and external challenges. Besides, existing opportunities within China’s Coast Guard Administration are analysed as well as three different aspects. The concluding chapter summarizes the discussion and analysis of this dissertation, as well as confirming the challenges and opportunities are fulfilling the aim of this dissertation. Finally, several feasible recommendations are put forward which are based on the analysis of challenges and opportunities to promote the development of China’s Coast Guard Administration

    Performance Analysis and Optimisation of In-network Caching for Information-Centric Future Internet

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    The rapid development in wireless technologies and multimedia services has radically shifted the major function of the current Internet from host-centric communication to service-oriented content dissemination, resulting a mismatch between the protocol design and the current usage patterns. Motivated by this significant change, Information-Centric Networking (ICN), which has been attracting ever-increasing attention from the communication networks research community, has emerged as a new clean-slate networking paradigm for future Internet. Through identifying and routing data by unified names, ICN aims at providing natural support for efficient information retrieval over the Internet. As a crucial characteristic of ICN, in-network caching enables users to efficiently access popular contents from on-path routers equipped with ubiquitous caches, leading to the enhancement of the service quality and reduction of network loads. Performance analysis and optimisation has been and continues to be key research interests of ICN. This thesis focuses on the development of efficient and accurate analytical models for the performance evaluation of ICN caching and the design of optimal caching management schemes under practical network configurations. This research starts with the proposition of a new analytical model for caching performance under the bursty multimedia traffic. The bursty characteristic is captured and the closed formulas for cache hit ratio are derived. To investigate the impact of topology and heterogeneous caching parameters on the performance, a comprehensive analytical model is developed to gain valuable insight into the caching performance with heterogeneous cache sizes, service intensity and content distribution under arbitrary topology. The accuracy of the proposed models is validated by comparing the analytical results with those obtained from extensive simulation experiments. The analytical models are then used as cost-efficient tools to investigate the key network and content parameters on the performance of caching in ICN. Bursty traffic and heterogeneous caching features have significant influence on the performance of ICN. Therefore, in order to obtain optimal performance results, a caching resource allocation scheme, which leverages the proposed model and targets at minimising the total traffic within the network and improving hit probability at the nodes, is proposed. The performance results reveal that the caching allocation scheme can achieve better caching performance and network resource utilisation than the default homogeneous and random caching allocation strategy. To attain a thorough understanding of the trade-off between the economic aspect and service quality, a cost-aware Quality-of-Service (QoS) optimisation caching mechanism is further designed aiming for cost-efficiency and QoS guarantee in ICN. A cost model is proposed to take into account installation and operation cost of ICN under a realistic ISP network scenario, and a QoS model is presented to formulate the service delay and delay jitter in the presence of heterogeneous service requirements and general probabilistic caching strategy. Numerical results show the effectiveness of the proposed mechanism in achieving better service quality and lower network cost. In this thesis, the proposed analytical models are used to efficiently and accurately evaluate the performance of ICN and investigate the key performance metrics. Leveraging the insights discovered by the analytical models, the proposed caching management schemes are able to optimise and enhance the performance of ICN. To widen the outcomes achieved in the thesis, several interesting yet challenging research directions are pointed out

    HiQR: An efficient algorithm for high dimensional quadratic regression with penalties

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    This paper investigates the efficient solution of penalized quadratic regressions in high-dimensional settings. We propose a novel and efficient algorithm for ridge-penalized quadratic regression that leverages the matrix structures of the regression with interactions. Building on this formulation, we develop an alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) framework for penalized quadratic regression with general penalties, including both single and hybrid penalty functions. Our approach greatly simplifies the calculations to basic matrix-based operations, making it appealing in terms of both memory storage and computational complexity.Comment: 18 page

    Why KDAC? A general activation function for knowledge discovery

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    Deep learning oriented named entity recognition (DNER) has gradually become the paradigm of knowledge discovery, which greatly promotes domain intelligence. However, the current activation function of DNER fails to treat gradient vanishing, no negative output or non-differentiable existence, which may impede knowledge exploration caused by the omission and incomplete representation of latent semantics. To break through the dilemma, we present a novel activation function termed KDAC. Detailly, KDAC is an aggregation function with multiple conversion modes. The backbone of the activation region is the interaction between exponent and linearity, and the both ends extend through adaptive linear divergence, which surmounts the obstacle of gradient vanishing and no negative output. Crucially, the non-differentiable points are alerted and eliminated by an approximate smoothing algorithm. KDAC has a series of brilliant properties, including nonlinear, stable near-linear transformation and derivative, as well as dynamic style, etc. We perform experiments based on BERT-BiLSTM-CNN-CRF model on six benchmark datasets containing different domain knowledge, such as Weibo, Clinical, E-commerce, Resume, HAZOP and People's daily. The evaluation results show that KDAC is advanced and effective, and can provide more generalized activation to stimulate the performance of DNER. We hope that KDAC can be exploited as a promising activation function to devote itself to the construction of knowledge.Comment: Accepted by Neurocomputin

    Missing Modality meets Meta Sampling (M3S): An Efficient Universal Approach for Multimodal Sentiment Analysis with Missing Modality

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    Multimodal sentiment analysis (MSA) is an important way of observing mental activities with the help of data captured from multiple modalities. However, due to the recording or transmission error, some modalities may include incomplete data. Most existing works that address missing modalities usually assume a particular modality is completely missing and seldom consider a mixture of missing across multiple modalities. In this paper, we propose a simple yet effective meta-sampling approach for multimodal sentiment analysis with missing modalities, namely Missing Modality-based Meta Sampling (M3S). To be specific, M3S formulates a missing modality sampling strategy into the modal agnostic meta-learning (MAML) framework. M3S can be treated as an efficient add-on training component on existing models and significantly improve their performances on multimodal data with a mixture of missing modalities. We conduct experiments on IEMOCAP, SIMS and CMU-MOSI datasets, and superior performance is achieved compared with recent state-of-the-art methods

    Invariant-Feature Subspace Recovery: A New Class of Provable Domain Generalization Algorithms

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    Domain generalization asks for models trained over a set of training environments to generalize well in unseen test environments. Recently, a series of algorithms such as Invariant Risk Minimization (IRM) have been proposed for domain generalization. However, Rosenfeld et al. (2021) shows that in a simple linear data model, even if non-convexity issues are ignored, IRM and its extensions cannot generalize to unseen environments with less than ds+1d_s+1 training environments, where dsd_s is the dimension of the spurious-feature subspace. In this work, we propose Invariant-feature Subspace Recovery (ISR): a new class of algorithms to achieve provable domain generalization across the settings of classification and regression problems. First, in the binary classification setup of Rosenfeld et al. (2021), we show that our first algorithm, ISR-Mean, can identify the subspace spanned by invariant features from the first-order moments of the class-conditional distributions, and achieve provable domain generalization with ds+1d_s+1 training environments. Our second algorithm, ISR-Cov, further reduces the required number of training environments to O(1)O(1) using the information of second-order moments. Notably, unlike IRM, our algorithms bypass non-convexity issues and enjoy global convergence guarantees. Next, we extend ISR-Mean to the more general setting of multi-class classification and propose ISR-Multiclass, which leverages class information and provably recovers the invariant-feature subspace with ⌈ds/k⌉+1\lceil d_s/k\rceil+1 training environments for kk-class classification. Finally, for regression problems, we propose ISR-Regression that can identify the invariant-feature subspace with ds+1d_s+1 training environments. Empirically, we demonstrate the superior performance of our ISRs on synthetic benchmarks. Further, ISR can be used as post-processing methods for feature extractors such as neural nets.Comment: Submitted to JMLR. This journal version significantly extends our ICML 2022 paper, arXiv:2201.1291

    Offline Meta Reinforcement Learning with In-Distribution Online Adaptation

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    Recent offline meta-reinforcement learning (meta-RL) methods typically utilize task-dependent behavior policies (e.g., training RL agents on each individual task) to collect a multi-task dataset. However, these methods always require extra information for fast adaptation, such as offline context for testing tasks. To address this problem, we first formally characterize a unique challenge in offline meta-RL: transition-reward distribution shift between offline datasets and online adaptation. Our theory finds that out-of-distribution adaptation episodes may lead to unreliable policy evaluation and that online adaptation with in-distribution episodes can ensure adaptation performance guarantee. Based on these theoretical insights, we propose a novel adaptation framework, called In-Distribution online Adaptation with uncertainty Quantification (IDAQ), which generates in-distribution context using a given uncertainty quantification and performs effective task belief inference to address new tasks. We find a return-based uncertainty quantification for IDAQ that performs effectively. Experiments show that IDAQ achieves state-of-the-art performance on the Meta-World ML1 benchmark compared to baselines with/without offline adaptation
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