31 research outputs found

    Discrete Cocompact Subgroups of the Five-Dimensional Connected and Simply Connected Nilpotent Lie Groups

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    The discrete cocompact subgroups of the five-dimensional connected, simply connected nilpotent Lie groups are determined up to isomorphism. Moreover, we prove if G=N×AG=N\times A is a connected, simply connected, nilpotent Lie group with an Abelian factor AA, then every uniform subgroup of GG is the direct product of a uniform subgroup of NN and Zr{\mathbb Z}^r where r=dimAr=\dim A

    Sur les représentations mixtes des groupes de Lie résolubles exponentiels

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    Let G be an exponential solvable Lie group, H and A two closed connected subgroups of G and [sigma] a unitary and irreducible representation of H. We prove the orbital spectrum formula of the Up-Down representation [rho](G,H, A, [sigma]) = IndGH [sigma] A . When G is nilpotent, the multiplicities of such representation turns out to be uniformly infinite or finite and bounded. A necessary and sufficient condition for the finiteness of the multiplicities is given. The same results are obtained when G is exponential solvable Lie group, H and A are invariant

    Reconocimiento de acto de diálogo secuencial para debates argumentativos árabes

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    Dialogue act recognition remains a primordial task that helps user to automatically identify participants’ intentions. In this paper, we propose a sequential approach consisting of segmentation followed by annotation process to identify dialogue acts within Arabic politic debates. To perform DA recognition, we used the CARD corpus labeled using the SADA annotation schema. Segmentation and annotation tasks were then carried out using Conditional Random Fields probabilistic models as they prove high performance in segmenting and labeling sequential data. Learning results are notably important for the segmentation task (F-score=97.9%) and relatively reliable within the annotation process (f-score=63.4%) given the complexity of identifying argumentative tags and the presence of disfluencies in spoken conversations.El reconocimiento del acto de diálogo sigue siendo una tarea primordial que ayuda al usuario a identificar automáticamente las intenciones de los participantes. En este documento, proponemos un enfoque secuencial que consiste en la segmentación seguida de un proceso de anotación para identificar actos de diálogo dentro de los debates políticos árabes. Para realizar el reconocimiento DA, utilizamos el corpus CARD etiquetado utilizando el esquema de anotación SADA. Las tareas de segmentación y anotación se llevaron a cabo utilizando modelos probabilísticos de Campos aleatorios condicionales, ya que demuestran un alto rendimiento en la segmentación y el etiquetado de datos secuenciales. Los resultados de aprendizaje son especialmente importantes para la tarea de segmentación (F-score = 97.9%) y relativamente confiables dentro del proceso de anotación (f-score = 63.4%) dada la complejidad de identificar etiquetas argumentativas y la presencia de disfluencias en las conversaciones habladas
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