4,572 research outputs found
A Hybrid Approach for Aspect-Based Sentiment Analysis Using Deep Contextual Word Embeddings and Hierarchical Attention
The Web has become the main platform where people express their opinions
about entities of interest and their associated aspects. Aspect-Based Sentiment
Analysis (ABSA) aims to automatically compute the sentiment towards these
aspects from opinionated text. In this paper we extend the state-of-the-art
Hybrid Approach for Aspect-Based Sentiment Analysis (HAABSA) method in two
directions. First we replace the non-contextual word embeddings with deep
contextual word embeddings in order to better cope with the word semantics in a
given text. Second, we use hierarchical attention by adding an extra attention
layer to the HAABSA high-level representations in order to increase the method
flexibility in modeling the input data. Using two standard datasets (SemEval
2015 and SemEval 2016) we show that the proposed extensions improve the
accuracy of the built model for ABSA.Comment: Accepted for publication in the 20th International Conference on Web
Engineering (ICWE 2020), Helsinki Finland, 9-12 June 202
Optimizing flow rates in a queueing network with side constraints
Network Analysis;operations research
Experience with a Pre-Series Superfluid Helium Test Bench for LHC Magnets
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) under construction at CERN is based on the use of high-field superconducting magnets operating in superfluid helium. For the validation of the machine dipoles and quadrupoles, a magnet test plant is under construction requiring 12 so-called Cryogenic Feeder Units (CFU). Based on experience done at CERN, two pre-series CFUs were designed and built by industry and are currently in use prior to final series delivery. This presentation describes the features of a CFU, its typical characteristics and the experience acquired with the first units
Normal frames and the validity of the equivalence principle. III. The case along smooth maps with separable points of self-intersection
The equivalence principle is treated on a mathematically rigorous base on
sufficiently general subsets of a differentiable manifold. This is carried out
using the basis of derivations of the tensor algebra over that manifold.
Necessary and/or sufficient conditions of existence, uniqueness, and
holonomicity of these bases in which the components of the derivations of the
tensor algebra over it vanish on these subsets, are studied. The linear
connections are considered in this context. It is shown that the equivalence
principle is identically valid at any point, and along any path, in every
gravitational theory based on linear connections. On higher dimensional
submanifolds it may be valid only in certain exceptional cases.Comment: 15 standard LaTeX 2e (11pt, A4) pages. The package amsfonts is
require
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