474 research outputs found
Finding a Mate With No Social Skills
Sexual reproductive behavior has a necessary social coordination component as
willing and capable partners must both be in the right place at the right time.
While there are many known social behavioral adaptations to support solutions
to this problem, we explore the possibility and likelihood of solutions that
rely only on non-social mechanisms. We find three kinds of social organization
that help solve this social coordination problem (herding, assortative mating,
and natal philopatry) emerge in populations of simulated agents with no social
mechanisms available to support these organizations. We conclude that the
non-social origins of these social organizations around sexual reproduction may
provide the environment for the development of social solutions to the same and
different problems.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, GECCO'1
Online Pattern Matching for String Edit Distance with Moves
Edit distance with moves (EDM) is a string-to-string distance measure that
includes substring moves in addition to ordinal editing operations to turn one
string to the other. Although optimizing EDM is intractable, it has many
applications especially in error detections. Edit sensitive parsing (ESP) is an
efficient parsing algorithm that guarantees an upper bound of parsing
discrepancies between different appearances of the same substrings in a string.
ESP can be used for computing an approximate EDM as the L1 distance between
characteristic vectors built by node labels in parsing trees. However, ESP is
not applicable to a streaming text data where a whole text is unknown in
advance. We present an online ESP (OESP) that enables an online pattern
matching for EDM. OESP builds a parse tree for a streaming text and computes
the L1 distance between characteristic vectors in an online manner. For the
space-efficient computation of EDM, OESP directly encodes the parse tree into a
succinct representation by leveraging the idea behind recent results of a
dynamic succinct tree. We experimentally test OESP on the ability to compute
EDM in an online manner on benchmark datasets, and we show OESP's efficiency.Comment: This paper has been accepted to the 21st edition of the International
Symposium on String Processing and Information Retrieval (SPIRE2014
The benefits of using a walking interface to navigate virtual environments
Navigation is the most common interactive task performed in three-dimensional virtual environments (VEs), but it is also a task that users often find difficult. We investigated how body-based information about the translational and rotational components of movement helped participants to perform a navigational search task (finding targets hidden inside boxes in a room-sized space). When participants physically walked around the VE while viewing it on a head-mounted display (HMD), they then performed 90% of trials perfectly, comparable to participants who had performed an equivalent task in the real world during a previous study. By contrast, participants performed less than 50% of trials perfectly if they used a tethered HMD (move by physically turning but pressing a button to translate) or a desktop display (no body-based information). This is the most complex navigational task in which a real-world level of performance has been achieved in a VE. Behavioral data indicates that both translational and rotational body-based information are required to accurately update one's position during navigation, and participants who walked tended to avoid obstacles, even though collision detection was not implemented and feedback not provided. A walking interface would bring immediate benefits to a number of VE applications
Suffix Tree of Alignment: An Efficient Index for Similar Data
We consider an index data structure for similar strings. The generalized
suffix tree can be a solution for this. The generalized suffix tree of two
strings and is a compacted trie representing all suffixes in and
. It has leaves and can be constructed in time.
However, if the two strings are similar, the generalized suffix tree is not
efficient because it does not exploit the similarity which is usually
represented as an alignment of and .
In this paper we propose a space/time-efficient suffix tree of alignment
which wisely exploits the similarity in an alignment. Our suffix tree for an
alignment of and has leaves where is the sum of
the lengths of all parts of different from and is the sum of the
lengths of some common parts of and . We did not compromise the pattern
search to reduce the space. Our suffix tree can be searched for a pattern
in time where is the number of occurrences of in and
. We also present an efficient algorithm to construct the suffix tree of
alignment. When the suffix tree is constructed from scratch, the algorithm
requires time where is the sum of the lengths
of other common substrings of and . When the suffix tree of is
already given, it requires time.Comment: 12 page
Partial least squares for word confidence estimation in machine translation
The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-38628-2_59We present a new technique to estimate the reliability of the words in automatically generated translations. Our approach addresses confidence estimation as a classification problem where a confidence score is to be predicted from a feature vector that represents each translated word. We describe a new set of prediction features designed to capture context information, and propose a model based on partial least squares to perform the classification. Good empirical results are reported in a large-domain news translation task.Work supported by the European Union Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007-2013) under the CasMaCat project (grants agreement no 287576), by Spanish MICINN under TIASA (TIN2009-14205-C04-02) project, and by the Generalitat Valenciana under grant ALMPR (Prometeo/2009/014).González Rubio, J.; Navarro Cerdán, JR.; Casacuberta Nolla, F. (2013). Partial least squares for word confidence estimation in machine translation. En Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis. Springer Verlag (Germany). 500-508. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-38628-2_59S500508NIST: National Institute of Standards and Technology MT evaluation official results (November 2006), http://www.itl.nist.gov/iad/mig/tests/mt/Ueffing, N., Macherey, K., Ney, H.: Confidence measures for statistical machine translation. In: Proc. of the MT Summit, pp. 394–401. Springer (2003)Sanchis, A., Juan, A., Vidal, E.: Estimation of confidence measures for machine translation. In: Proc. of the Machine Translation Summit, pp. 407–412 (2007)Wold, H.: Estimation of Principal Components and Related Models by Iterative Least squares, pp. 391–420. Academic Press, New York (1966)Berger, A.L., Pietra, V.J.D., Pietra, S.A.D.: A maximum entropy approach to natural language processing. Computational Linguistics 22, 39–71 (1996)Levenshtein, V.: Binary codes capable of correcting deletions, insertions and reversals. Soviet Physics Doklady 10(8), 707–710 (1966)Brown, P., Della Pietra, V., Della Pietra, S., Mercer, R.: The mathematics of statistical machine translation: parameter estimation. Computational Linguistics 19, 263–311 (1993)Mevik, B.H., Wehrens, R., Liland, K.H.: pls: Partial Least Squares and Principal Component regression. R package version 2.3-0 (2011)Callison-Burch, C., Koehn, P., Monz, C., Post, M., Soricut, R., Specia, L.: Findings of the 2012 workshop on statistical machine translation. In: Proc. of the Workshop on Statistical Machine Translation, Montréal, Canada, pp. 10–51 (June 2012)Chinchor, N.: The statistical significance of the muc-4 results. In: Proceedings of the Conference on Message Understanding, pp. 30–50 (1992
DYNAMO-MAS: a multi-agent system for ontology evolution from text
International audienceManual ontology development and evolution are complex and time-consuming tasks, even when textual documents are used as knowledge sources in addition to human expertise or existing ontologies. Processing natural language in text produces huge amounts of linguistic data that need to be filtered out and structured. To support both of these tasks, we have developed DYNAMO-MAS, an interactive tool based on an adaptive multi-agent system (adaptive MAS or AMAS) that builds and evolves ontologies from text. DYNA-MO-MAS is a partner system to build ontologies; the ontologist interacts with the system to validate or modify its outputs. This paper presents the architecture of DYNAMO-MAS, its operating principles and its evaluation on three case studies
Data driven Xpath generation
The XPath query language offers a standard for information extraction from HTML documents. Therefore, the DOM tree represen- tation is typically used, which models the hierarchical structure of the document. One of the key aspects of HTML is the separation of data and the structure that is used to represent it. A consequence thereof is that data extraction algorithms usually fail to identify data if the structure of a document is changed. In this paper, it is investigated how a set of tab- ular oriented XPath queries can be adapted in such a way it deals with modifications in the DOM tree of an HTML document. The basic idea is hereby that if data has already been extracted in the past, it could be used to reconstruct XPath queries that retrieve the data from a different DOM tree. Experimental results show the accuracy of our method
The Cinderella moment:Exploring consumers’ motivations to engage with renting as collaborative luxury consumption mode
Past literature argued that the purchase of luxury goods is driven by people’s motivation to conform or fit into our economic and social system. In this study, the authors focus on a new aspect of consumption, i.e. renting instead of purchasing luxury goods, backed by the emerging opportunities of sharing economy platforms. Drawing upon the analysis of spontaneous consumers’ online communications (in the form of tweets), this research aims to investigate the motivations to engage with luxury garment renting within a collaborative consumption context. To this end, a series of automatic content analyses, via two studies, were conducted using the tweets posted with respect to the Run the Runway collaborative consumption platform. Results demonstrate consumers’ increased willingness to show their social status through renting rather than owning luxurious apparel based on five main motivators (need to wear new clothes for a special event, inspirations created by the products/brands, possibility to explore a new way of consuming luxury goods, need to make more sustainable choices, and to increase the life cycle of each luxury product). The implications of these findings are discussed, while they pave the way for future research in collaborative consumption of luxury retailing
Unitary designs and codes
A unitary design is a collection of unitary matrices that approximate the
entire unitary group, much like a spherical design approximates the entire unit
sphere. In this paper, we use irreducible representations of the unitary group
to find a general lower bound on the size of a unitary t-design in U(d), for
any d and t. We also introduce the notion of a unitary code - a subset of U(d)
in which the trace inner product of any pair of matrices is restricted to only
a small number of distinct values - and give an upper bound for the size of a
code of degree s in U(d) for any d and s. These bounds can be strengthened when
the particular inner product values that occur in the code or design are known.
Finally, we describe some constructions of designs: we give an upper bound on
the size of the smallest weighted unitary t-design in U(d), and we catalogue
some t-designs that arise from finite groups.Comment: 25 pages, no figure
- …