166 research outputs found

    Semantic levels of domain-independent commonsense knowledgebase for visual indexing and retrieval applications

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    Building intelligent tools for searching, indexing and retrieval applications is needed to congregate the rapidly increasing amount of visual data. This raised the need for building and maintaining ontologies and knowledgebases to support textual semantic representation of visual contents, which is an important block in these applications. This paper proposes a commonsense knowledgebase that forms the link between the visual world and its semantic textual representation. This domain-independent knowledge is provided at different levels of semantics by a fully automated engine that analyses, fuses and integrates previous commonsense knowledgebases. This knowledgebase satisfies the levels of semantic by adding two new levels: temporal event scenarios and psycholinguistic understanding. Statistical properties and an experiment evaluation, show coherency and effectiveness of the proposed knowledgebase in providing the knowledge needed for wide-domain visual applications

    Sensing Subjective Well-being from Social Media

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    Subjective Well-being(SWB), which refers to how people experience the quality of their lives, is of great use to public policy-makers as well as economic, sociological research, etc. Traditionally, the measurement of SWB relies on time-consuming and costly self-report questionnaires. Nowadays, people are motivated to share their experiences and feelings on social media, so we propose to sense SWB from the vast user generated data on social media. By utilizing 1785 users' social media data with SWB labels, we train machine learning models that are able to "sense" individual SWB from users' social media. Our model, which attains the state-by-art prediction accuracy, can then be used to identify SWB of large population of social media users in time with very low cost.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figures, 2 tables, 10th International Conference, AMT 2014, Warsaw, Poland, August 11-14, 2014. Proceeding

    Longitudinal associations between keeping a secret and psychosocial adjustment in adolescence

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    Increasing bodies of evidence suggest that keeping secrets may be detrimental to well-being and adjustment, whereas confiding secrets may alleviate the detriments of secrecy and benefit well-being and adjustment. However, few studies have addressed the consequences of keeping and confiding secrets simultaneously, and even fewer have done so longitudinally. This article reports on a two-wave longitudinal survey study among 278 adolescents (aged 13-18 years) that examined the associations of keeping and confiding a specific secret with psychosocial adjustment. Results confirmed a hypothesized longitudinal contribution of keeping a secret all to oneself to psychosocial problems, including depressive mood, low self-concept clarity, low self-control, loneliness, and poor relationship quality. Furthermore, confiding versus continuing to keep a secret all to oneself was associated with decreased psychosocial problems after six months, whereas starting to keep a secret versus not doing so was associated with increased psychosocial problems. These results suggest that the keeping or confiding of secrets may affect adolescents' psychosocial well-being and adjustment. © 2008 The International Society for the Study of Behavioural Development

    ''Remembering'' World War II and willingness to fight : sociocultural factors in the social representation of historical warfare across 22 societies

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    Students from 22 nations answered a survey on the most important events in world history. At the national level, free recalling and a positive evaluation of World War II (WWII) were associated with World Values Survey willingness to fight for the country in a war and being a victorious nation. Willingness to fight, a more benign evaluation of WWII, and recall of WWII were associ- ated with nation-level scores on power distance and low postmaterialism, suggesting that values stressing obedience and competition between nations are associated with support for collective violence, whereas values of expressive individualism are negatively related. Internal political vio- lence was unrelated to willingness to fight, excluding direct learning as an explanation of legit- imization of violence. Recall of wars in general (operationalized by WWI recall) was also unrelated to willingness to fight. Results replicate and extend Archer and Gartner’s classic study showing the legitimization of violence by war to the domain of collective remembering

    Recent trends in digital text forensics and its evaluation

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    The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-40802-1_28This paper outlines the concepts and achievements of our evaluation lab on digital text forensics, PAN 13, which called for original research and development on plagiarism detection, author identification, and author profiling. We present a standardized evaluation framework for each of the three tasks and discuss the evaluation results of the altogether 58 submitted contributions. For the first time, instead of accepting the output of software runs, we collected the softwares themselves and run them on a computer cluster at our site. As evaluation and experimentation platform we use TIRA, which is being developed at the Webis Group in Weimar. TIRA can handle large-scale software submissions by means of virtualization, sandboxed execution, tailored unit testing, and staged submission. In addition to the achieved evaluation results, a major achievement of our lab is that we now have the largest collection of state-of-the-art approaches with regard to the mentioned tasks for further analysis at our disposal.This work was partially supported by the WIQ-EI IRSES project (Grant No. 269180) within the FP7 Marie Curie action.Gollub, T.; Potthast, M.; Beyer, A.; Busse, M.; Rangel Pardo, FM.; Rosso, P.; Stamatatos, E.... (2013). Recent trends in digital text forensics and its evaluation. En Information Access Evaluation. Multilinguality, Multimodality, and Visualization. Springer Verlag (Germany). 282-302. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-40802-1_28S282302Aleman, Y., Loya, N., Vilarino Ayala, D., Pinto, D.: Two Methodologies Applied to the Author Profiling Task—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Argamon, S., Juola, P.: Overview of the International Authorship Identification Competition at PAN-2011. In: Proc. of CLEF 2011 (2011)Argamon, S., Koppel, M., Fine, J., Shimoni, A.R.: Gender, Genre, and Writing Style in Formal Written Texts. TEXT 23, 321–346 (2003)Argamon, S., Koppel, M., Pennebaker, J.W., Schler, J.: Automatically Profiling the Author of an Anonymous Text. Commun. ACM 52(2), 119–123 (2009)Armstrong, T.G., Moffat, A., Webber, W., Zobel, J.: EvaluatIR: An Online Tool for Evaluating and Comparing IR Systems. In: Proc. of SIGIR 2009 (2009)Blockeel, H., Vanschoren, J.: Experiment Databases: Towards an Improved Experimental Methodology in Machine Learning. In: Kok, J.N., Koronacki, J., Lopez de Mantaras, R., Matwin, S., Mladenič, D., Skowron, A. (eds.) PKDD 2007. LNCS (LNAI), vol. 4702, pp. 6–17. Springer, Heidelberg (2007)Burger, J.D., Henderson, J., Kim, G., Zarrella, G.: Discriminating Gender on Twitter. In: Proc. EMNLP 2011 (2011)Clough, P., Stevenson, M.: Developing a Corpus of Plagiarised Short Answers. Lang. Resour. Eval. 45, 5–24 (2011)Clough, P., Gaizauskas, R., Piao, S.S.L., Wilks, Y.: METER: MEasuring TExt Reuse. In: Proc. ACL 2002 (2002)De Roure, D., Goble, C., Stevens, R.: The Design and Realisation of the myExperiment Virtual Research Environment for Social Sharing of Workflows. Future Gener. Comp. Sy. 25, 561–567 (2009)Caurcel Diaz, A.A., Gomez Hidalgo, J.M.: Experiments with SMS Translation and Stochastic Gradient Descent in Spanish Text Author Profiling—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Downie, J.S.: The Music Information Retrieval Evaluation Exchange (2005–2007): A Window into Music Information Retrieval Research. Acoust. Sc. and Tech. 29(4), 247–255 (2008)Hernandez Farias, D.I., Guzman-Cabrera, R., Reyes, A., Rocha, M.A.: Semantic-based Features for Author Profiling Identification: First Insights—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Flekova, L., Gurevych, I.: Can We Hide in the Web? Large Scale Simultaneous Age and Gender Author Profiling in Social Media–Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Forner, P., Navigli, R., Tufis, D. (eds.): CLEF 2013 Evaluation Labs and Workshop – Working Notes Papers (2013)Gillam, L.: Readability for author profiling?—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Gollub, T., Burrows, S., Stein, B.: First Experiences with TIRA for Reproducible Evaluation in Information Retrieval. In: Proc. of OSIR at SIGIR 2012 (August 2012)Gollub, T., Stein, B., Burrows, S.: Ousting Ivory Tower Research: Towards a Web Framework for Providing Experiments as a Service. In: Proc. of SIGIR 2012 (2012)Gollub, T., Stein, B., Burrows, S., Hoppe, D.: TIRA: Configuring, Executing, and Disseminating Information Retrieval Experiments. In: Proc. of TIR at DEXA 2012. IEEE (2012)Goswami, S., Sarkar, S., Rustagi, M.: Stylometric Analysis of Bloggers’ Age and Gender. In: Proc. of ICWSM 2009 (2009)Haggag, O., El-Beltagy, S.: Plagiarism Candidate Retrieval Using Selective Query Formulation and Discriminative Query Scoring—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Holmes, J., Meyerhoff, M.: The Handbook of Language and Gender. Blackwell Handbooks in Linguistics. Wiley (2003)Inches, G., Crestani, F.: Overview of the International Sexual Predator Identification Competition at PAN-2012. In: Proc. of CLEF 2012 (2012)Juola, P.: Authorship Attribution. Found. and Trends in IR 1, 234–334 (2008)Juola, P.: Ad-hoc Authorship Attribution Competition. In: Proc. of ALLC 2004 (2004)Juola, P.: An Overview of the Traditional Authorship Attribution Subtask. In: Proc. of CLEF 2012 (2012)Koppel, M., Winter, Y.: Determining if Two Documents are by the Same Author. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology (to appear)Koppel, M., Argamon, S., Shimoni, A.R.: Automatically Categorizing Written Texts by Author Gender. Literary and Linguistic Computing 17(4), 401–412 (2002)Koppel, M., Schler, J., Bonchek-Dokow, E.: Measuring Differentiability: Unmasking Pseudonymous Authors. Journal of Machine Learning Research 8, 1261–1276 (2007)Koppel, M., Schler, J., Argamon, S.: Authorship Attribution in the Wild. Language Resources and Evaluation 45, 83–94 (2011)Kong, L., Qi, H., Du, C., Wang, M., Han, Z.: Approaches for Source Retrieval and Text Alignment of Plagiarism Detection—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Lim, W.Y., Goh, J., Thing, V.L.L.: Content-centric age and gender profiling—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Pastor Lopez-Monroy, A., Montes-Y-Gomez, M., Jair Escalante, H., Villasenor-Pineda, L., Villatoro-Tello, E.: INAOE’s participation at PAN’13: Author Profiling task—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Meina, M., Brodzinska, K., Celmer, B., Czokow, M., Patera, M., Pezacki, J., Wilk, M.: Ensemble-based Classification for Author Profiling using Various Features—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Nguyen, D., Gravel, R., Trieschnigg, D., Meder, T.: “How Old Do You Think I Am?”; A Study of Language and Age in Twitter. In: Proc. of ICWSM 2013 (2013)Nguyen, D., Smith, N.A., Rosé, C.P.: Author Age Prediction from Text Using Linear Regression. In: Proc. of LaTeCH at ACL-HLTGopal Patra, B., Banerjee, S., Das, D., Saikh, T., Bandyopadhyay, S.: Automatic Author Profiling Based on Linguistic and Stylistic Features—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Peersman, C., Daelemans, W., Van Vaerenbergh, L.: Predicting Age and Gender in Online Social Networks. In: Proc. of SMUC 2011 (2011)Pennebaker, J.W.: The Secret Life of Pronouns: What Our Words Say About Us. Bloomsbury, USA (2013)Pennebaker, J.W., Mehl, M.R., Niederhoffer, K.G.: Psychological Aspects of Natural Language Use: Our Words, Our Selves. Annual Review of Psychology 54(1), 547–577 (2003)Potthast, M., Stein, B., Eiselt, A., Barrón-Cedeño, A., Rosso, P.: Overview of the 1st International Competition on Plagiarism Detection. In: Proc. of PAN at SEPLN 2009 (2009)Potthast, M., Barrón-Cedeño, A., Eiselt, A., Stein, B., Rosso, P.: Overview of the 2nd International Competition on Plagiarism Detection. In: Proc. of CLEF 2010 (2010)Potthast, M., Stein, B., Barrón-Cedeño, A., Rosso, P.: An Evaluation Framework for Plagiarism Detection. In: Proc. of COLING 2010 (2010)Potthast, M., Eiselt, A., Barrón-Cedeño, A., Stein, B., Rosso, P.: Overview of the 3rd International Competition on Plagiarism Detection. In: Proc. of CLEF 2011 (2011)Potthast, M., Gollub, T., Hagen, M., Graßegger, J., Kiesel, J., Michel, M., Oberländer, A., Tippmann, M., Barrón-Cedeño, A., Gupta, P., Rosso, P., Stein, B.: Overview of the 4th International Competition on Plagiarism Detection. In: Proc. of CLEF 2012 (2012)Potthast, M., Hagen, M., Stein, B., Graßegger, J., Michel, M., Tippmann, M., Welsch, C.: ChatNoir: A Search Engine for the ClueWeb09 Corpus. In: Proc. of SIGIR 2012 (2012)Potthast, M., Gollub, T., Hagen, M., Tippmann, M., Kiesel, J., Rosso, P., Stamatatos, E., Stein, B.: Overview of the 5th International Competition on Plagiarism Detection. In: Proc. of CLEF 2013 (2013)Potthast, M., Hagen, M., Völske, M., Stein, B.: Crowdsourcing Interaction Logs to Understand Text Reuse from the Web. In: Proc. of ACL 2013. ACM (to appear, August 2013b)Rodíguez Torrejón, D.A., Martín Ramos, J.M.: Text Alignment Module in CoReMo 2.1 Plagiarism Detector—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Santosh, K., Bansal, R., Shekhar, M., Varma, V.: Author Profiling: Predicting Age and Gender from Blogs—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Schler, J., Koppel, M., Argamon, S., Pennebaker, J.W.: Effects of Age and Gender on Blogging. In: Proc. of CAAW 2006 (2006)Stamatatos, E.: A Survey of Modern Authorship Attribution Methods. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 60, 538–556 (2009)Stamatatos, E.: Plagiarism Detection Using Stopword N-grams. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 62(12), 2512–2527 (2011)Stein, B., Meyer zu Eißen, S., Potthast, M.: Strategies for Retrieving Plagiarized Documents. In: Proc. of SIGIR 2007 (2007)Suchomel, Š., Kasprzak, J., Brandejs, M.: Diverse Queries and Feature Type Selection for Plagiarism Discovery—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Williams, K., Chen, H., Chowdhury, S.R., Giles, C.L.: Unsupervised Ranking for Plagiarism Source Retrieval—Notebook for PAN at CLEF 2013. In: Forner, et al. (eds.) [15]Wojnarski, M., Stawicki, S., Wojnarowski, P.: TunedIT.org: System for Automated Evaluation of Algorithms in Repeatable Experiments. In: Szczuka, M., Kryszkiewicz, M., Ramanna, S., Jensen, R., Hu, Q. (eds.) RSCTC 2010. LNCS, vol. 6086, pp. 20–29. Springer, Heidelberg (2010)Zhang, C., Zhang, P.: Predicting Gender from Blog Posts. Technical report, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA (2010

    Qualidade de Vida e Atitudes dos Idosos Face à Velhice

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    A problemática do envelhecimento tem assumido, nos últimos anos, uma crescente importância na consciência coletiva da população, tornando-se cada vez mais importante compreender a população idosa e a sua realidade. Posto isto, foi realizado um estudo quantitativo e correlacional, que teve como objectivo avaliar a qualidade de vida e atitudes face à velhice de idosos, bem como a relação entre estas e as variáveis sociodemográficas e familiares. Foram inquiridos 100 idosos, com mais de 65 anos e sem deficit cognitivo . Para a recolha de dados utilizou-se uma entrevista estruturada, constituída dados sóciodemográficos do idoso, WHOQOL-AGE (Caballero, Miret, Power, Chatterji, Tobiasz-Adamczyk, Koskinen, Leonardi, Olaya, Haro &Ayuso-Mateos, 2013) e o AAQ ( Laidlaw, Power, Schmidt and the WHOQOL-OLD Group, 2007). Dos resultados destacamos os seguintes: A amostra é constituída por 52% de idosos do sexo masculino tendo uma média de idades de 74,7 (DP=6,8). È no fator Perdas Psicossociais e no Desenvolvimento Psicológico que os idosos têm uma melhor atitude face ao envelhecimento. É no item “Tem dinheiro suficiente para satisfazer as suas necessidades?” que os idosos apresentam uma menor qualidade de vida. Não ter doença diagnosticada e ser do sexo masculino permitem ter melhores atitudes face ao envelhecimento. A Qualidade de Vida está relacionada com a idade, com o estado de saúde e com a intensidade de preocupação da família. Constatou-se que os idosos que não estão institucionalizados apresentam uma melhor qualidade de vida e uma melhor atitude face à velhice. Quem não precisa de ajudas técnicas para se movimentar apresenta uma melhor qualidade de vida. Diferenças nas atitudes face ao envelhecimento consoante a residência onde habita são significativas nas mudanças físicas e no desenvolvimento psicológico sendo que os idosos que não vivem em lares têm uma atitude mais positiva em ambos os fatores. / Over the past few years the issue of aging has played a growing importance in the population`s collective consciousness becoming increasingly important to understand the elderly population and this reality. Therefore a quantitative correlational study was performed to assess the quality of life of seniors and their attitudes towards old age, and the relationship between these and the socio-demographic and family factors. 100 seniors with more than 65 years and without cognitive deficit were surveyed. For data collection we used a structured interview consisting of sociodemographic data of the elderly, WHOQOL-AGE (Caballero Miret Power Chatterji Tobiasz-Adamczyk Koskinen Leonardi Olaya Ayuso-Mateos & Haro 2013) and AAQ (Laidlaw Power Schmidt and the WHOQOL-OLD Group 2007). We highlight: The sample is composed of 52% of males with a mean age of 74.7 (SD = 6.8). It is in the factor Psychosocial Losses and Psychological Development that elderly people have a better attitude towards aging. It is in the item "Do you have enough money to meet your needs?" that seniors show less quality of life. Not having illness and being male allows having better attitudes towards aging. Quality of Life is related to age, health condition and the intensity of family concerns. It was observed that the elderly who are not institutionalized have a better quality of life and a better attitude towards old age. Who does not need assistive devices to move around has a better quality of life. Differences in attitudes towards aging, according to residency, are significant in physical changes and psychological development, thus verifying that elderly who do not live in nursing homes have a more positive attitude in both factors

    True and intentionally fabricated memories

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    The aim of the experiment reported here was to investigate the processes underlying the construction of truthful and deliberately fabricated memories. Properties of memories created to be intentionally false - fabricated memories - were compared to properties of memories believed to be true - true memories. Participants recalled and then wrote or spoke true memories and fabricated memories of everyday events. It was found that true memories were reliably more vivid than fabricated memories and were nearly always recalled from a first person perspective. In contrast, fabricated differed from true memories in that they were judged to be reliably older, were more frequently recalled from a third person perspective, and linguistic analysis revealed that they required more cognitive effort to generate. No notable differences were found across modality of reporting. Finally, it was found that, intentionally fabricated memories were created by recalling and then ‘editing’ true memories. Overall, these findings show that true and fabricated memories systematically differ, despite the fact that both are based on true memories
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