273 research outputs found

    Fast cross-validation for multi-penalty ridge regression

    Full text link
    High-dimensional prediction with multiple data types needs to account for potentially strong differences in predictive signal. Ridge regression is a simple model for high-dimensional data that has challenged the predictive performance of many more complex models and learners, and that allows inclusion of data type specific penalties. The largest challenge for multi-penalty ridge is to optimize these penalties efficiently in a cross-validation (CV) setting, in particular for GLM and Cox ridge regression, which require an additional estimation loop by iterative weighted least squares (IWLS). Our main contribution is a computationally very efficient formula for the multi-penalty, sample-weighted hat-matrix, as used in the IWLS algorithm. As a result, nearly all computations are in low-dimensional space, rendering a speed-up of several orders of magnitude. We developed a flexible framework that facilitates multiple types of response, unpenalized covariates, several performance criteria and repeated CV. Extensions to paired and preferential data types are included and illustrated on several cancer genomics survival prediction problems. Moreover, we present similar computational shortcuts for maximum marginal likelihood and Bayesian probit regression. The corresponding R-package, multiridge, serves as a versatile standalone tool, but also as a fast benchmark for other more complex models and multi-view learners

    Cross-Domain Polarity Models to Evaluate User eXperience in E-learning

    Full text link
    [EN] Virtual learning environments are growing in importance as fast as e-learning is becoming highly demanded by universities and students all over the world. This paper investigates how to automatically evaluate User eXperience in this domain using sentiment analysis techniques. For this purpose, a corpus with the opinions given by a total of 583 users (107 English speakers and 476 Spanish speakers) about three learning management systems in different courses has been built. All the collected opinions were manually labeled with polarity information (positive, negative or neutral) by three human annotators, both at the whole opinion and sentence levels. We have applied our state-of-the-art sentiment analysis models, trained with a corpus of a different semantic domain (a Twitter corpus), to study the use of cross-domain models for this task. Cross-domain models based on deep neural networks (convolutional neural networks, transformer encoders and attentional BLSTM models) have been tested. In order to contrast our results, three commercial systems for the same task (MeaningCloud, Microsoft Text Analytics and Google Cloud) were also tested. The obtained results are very promising and they give an insight to keep going the research of applying sentiment analysis tools on User eXperience evaluation. This is a pioneering idea to provide a better and accurate understanding on human needs in the interaction with virtual learning environments and a step towards the development of automatic tools that capture the feed-back of user perception for designing virtual learning environments centered in user's emotions, beliefs, preferences, perceptions, responses, behaviors and accomplishments that occur before, during and after the interaction.Partially supported by the Spanish MINECO and FEDER founds under Project TIN2017-85854-C4-2-R. Work of J.A. Gonzalez is financed under Grant PAID-01-17Sanchis-Font, R.; Castro-Bleda, MJ.; González-Barba, JÁ.; Pla Santamaría, F.; Hurtado Oliver, LF. (2021). Cross-Domain Polarity Models to Evaluate User eXperience in E-learning. Neural Processing Letters. 53:3199-3215. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11063-020-10260-5S3199321553Ba J, Kiros JR, Hinton GE (2016) Layer normalization. arxiv:1607.06450Bahdanau D, Cho K, Bengio Y (2015) Neural machine translation by jointly learning to align and translate. In: 3rd international conference on learning representations, ICLR 2015, San Diego, CA, USA, May 7–9, 2015, conference track proceedings. arxiv:1409.0473Baziotis C, Pelekis N, Doulkeridis C (2017) Datastories at SemEval-2017 task 4: deep LSTM with attention for message-level and topic-based sentiment analysis. In: Proceedings of the 11th international workshop on semantic evaluation (SemEval-2017). Association for Computational Linguistics, Vancouver, Canada, pp 747–754Cliche M (2017) BB\_twtr at SemEval-2017 task 4: Twitter sentiment analysis with CNNs and LSTMs. In: Proceedings of the 11th international workshop on semantic evaluation (SemEval-2017). Association for Computational Linguistics, Vancouver, Canada, pp 573–580. https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/S17-2094. https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/S17-2094Cohen J (1960) A coefficient of agreement for nominal scales. Educ Psychol Meas 20(1):37Devlin J, Chang MW, Lee K, Toutanova K (2019) BERT: pre-training of deep bidirectional transformers for language understanding. In: Proceedings of the 2019 conference of the North American chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies, volume 1 (long and short papers). Association for Computational Linguistics, Minneapolis, Minnesota, pp 4171–4186. https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/N19-1423. https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/N19-1423Diaz-Galiano MC, et al (2019) Overview of TASS 2019: one more further for the global Spanish sentiment analysis corpus. In: Proceedings of the Iberian languages evaluation forum (IberLEF 2019), CEUR-WS, Bilbao, Spain, CEUR workshop proceedings, pp 550–560Godin F, Vandersmissen B, De Neve W, Van de Walle R (2015) Multimedia lab @ ACL WNUT NER shared task: named entity recognition for Twitter microposts using distributed word representations. In: Proceedings of the workshop on noisy user-generated text. Association for Computational Linguistics, Beijing, China, pp 146–153. https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/W15-4322. https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W15-4322González J, Pla F, Hurtado L (2018) Elirf-upv en TASS 2018: Análisis de sentimientos en twitter basado en aprendizaje profundo (elirf-upv at TASS 2018: sentiment analysis in Twitter based on deep learning). In: Proceedings of TASS 2018: workshop on semantic analysis at SEPLN, TASS@SEPLN 2018, co-located with 34nd SEPLN conference (SEPLN 2018), Sevilla, Spain, September 18th, 2018, pp 37–44. http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2172/p2_elirf_tass2018.pdfGonzález J, Hurtado L, Pla F (2019) Elirf-upv at TASS 2019: transformer encoders for Twitter sentiment analysis in Spanish. In: Proceedings of the Iberian languages evaluation forum co-located with 35th conference of the Spanish Society for Natural Language Processing, IberLEF@SEPLN 2019, Bilbao, Spain, September 24th, 2019, pp 571–578. http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2421/TASS_paper_2.pdfGonzález JÁ, Pla F, Hurtado LF (2017) ELiRF-UPV at SemEval-2017 task 4: sentiment analysis using deep learning. In: Proceedings of the 11th international workshop on semantic evaluation (SemEval-2017). Association for Computational Linguistics, Vancouver, Canada, pp 723–727. https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/S17-2121. https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/S17-2121González JÁ, Hurtado LF, Pla F (2019) ELiRF-UPV at TASS 2019: transformer encoders for Twitter sentiment analysis in Spanish. In: Proceedings of the Iberian languages evaluation forum (IberLEF 2019), CEUR-WS, Bilbao, Spain, CEUR workshop proceedingsGoogleCloud (2019) Cloud natural language API. https://cloud.google.com/natural-language/. Accessed 27 Dec 2019Hassenzahl M, Tractinsky N (2006) User experience—a research agenda. Behav Inf Technol 25(2):91–97. https://doi.org/10.1080/01449290500330331Hochreiter S, Schmidhuber J (1997) Long short-term memory. Neural Comput 9(8):1735–1780. https://doi.org/10.1162/neco.1997.9.8.1735Hurtado Oliver LF, Pla F, González Barba J (2017) ELiRF-UPV at TASS 2017: sentiment analysis in Twitter based on deep learning. In: TASS 2017: workshop on semantic analysis at SEPLN, pp 29–34IBM (2019) Natural language understanding. https://www.ibm.com/watson/services/natural-language-understanding/. Accessed 27 Dec 2019ISO 9241-210:2019 (2019) Ergonomics of human-system interaction—part 210: human-centred design for interactive systems. International Standardization Organization (ISO). https://www.iso.org/standard/77520.html. Accessed 27 Dec 2019Kim Y (2014) Convolutional neural networks for sentence classification. In: Proceedings of the 2014 conference on empirical methods in natural language processing, EMNLP 2014, October 25–29, 2014, Doha, Qatar, a meeting of SIGDAT, a special interest group of the ACL, pp 1746–1751. http://aclweb.org/anthology/D/D14/D14-1181.pdfKrippendorff K (2004) Reliability in content analysis. Hum Commun Res 30(3):411–433Kujala S, Roto V, Väänänen-Vainio-Mattila K, Karapanos E, Sinnelä A (2011) UX curve: a method for evaluating long-term user experience. Interact Comput 23(5):473–483Liu B (2012) Sentiment analysis and opinion mining. A comprehensive introduction and survey. Morgan & Claypool Publishers, San RafaelLiu B, Hu M, Cheng J (2005) Opinion observer: analyzing and comparing opinions on the web. In: Proceedings of the 14th international conference on world wide web. ACM, New York, NY, USA, WWW ’05, pp 342–351. https://doi.org/10.1145/1060745.1060797Luque FM (2019) Atalaya at TASS 2019: data augmentation and robust embeddings for sentiment analysis. In: Proceedings of the Iberian languages evaluation forum (IberLEF 2019), CEUR-WS, Bilbao, Spain, CEUR workshop proceedingsManning CD, Surdeanu M, Bauer J, Finkel J, Bethard SJ, McClosky D (2014) The Stanford CoreNLP natural language processing toolkit. In: Association for computational linguistics (ACL) system demonstrations, pp 55–60. http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P14/P14-5010Martínez-Cámara E, Díaz-Galiano M, García-Cumbreras M, García-Vega M, Villena-Román J (2017) Overview of TASS 2017. In: Proceedings of TASS 2017: workshop on semantic analysis at SEPLN (TASS 2017), CEUR-WS, Murcia, Spain, CEUR workshop proceedings, vol 1896MeaningCloud (2019) Demo de Analítica de Textos. https://www.meaningcloud.com/es/demos/demo-analitica-textos. Accessed 27 Dec 2019MeaningCloud (2019) MeaningCloud: Servicios web de analítica y minería de textos. https://www.meaningcloud.com/. Accessed 27 Dec 2019MicrosoftAzure (2019) Text analytics API. https://azure.microsoft.com/es-es/services/cognitive-services/text-analytics/. Accessed 27 Dec 2019Pang B, Lee L, Vaithyanathan S (2002) Thumbs up? sentiment classification using machine learning techniques. In: Proceedings of the ACL-02 conference on empirical methods in natural language processing, vol 10. Association for Computational Linguistics, pp 79–86Pla F, Hurtado LF (2018) Spanish sentiment analysis in Twitter at the TASS workshop. Lang Resour Eval 52(2):645–672. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10579-017-9394-7Rauschenberger M, Schrepp M, Cota MP, Olschner S, Thomaschewski J (2013) Efficient measurement of the user experience of interactive products. How to use the user experience questionnaire (UEQ). Example: Spanish language version. Int J Interact Multimed Artif Intell 2(1):39–45. https://doi.org/10.9781/ijimai.2013.215Rosenthal S, Farra N, Nakov P (2017) SemEval-2017 task 4: sentiment analysis in Twitter. In: Proceedings of the 11th international workshop on semantic evaluation (SemEval-2017). Association for Computational Linguistics, Vancouver, Canada, pp 502–518. https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/S17-2088. https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/S17-2088Sadr H, Pedram MM, Teshnehlab M (2019) A robust sentiment analysis method based on sequential combination of convolutional and recursive neural networks. Neural Process Lett 50:2745–2761. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11063-019-10049-1Sanchis-Font R, Castro-Bleda M, González J (2019) Applying sentiment analysis with cross-domain models to evaluate user experience in virtual learning environments. In: Rojas I, Joya G, Catala A (eds) Advances in computational intelligence. IWANN (2019). Lecture notes in computer science, vol 11506. Springer, Cham, pp 609–620Schuster M, Paliwal K (1997) Bidirectional recurrent neural networks. Trans Signal Process 45(11):2673–2681. https://doi.org/10.1109/78.650093Scott WA (1955) Reliability of content analysis: the case of nominal scale coding. Public Opin Q 19(3):321–325. https://doi.org/10.1086/266577Socher R, Perelygin A, Wu J, Chuang J, Manning CD, Ng A, Potts C (2013) Recursive deep models for semantic compositionality over a sentiment treebank. In: Proceedings of the 2013 conference on empirical methods in natural language processing. Association for Computational Linguistics, Seattle, Washington, USA, pp 1631–1642. https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/D13-1170Turney PD (2002) Thumbs up or thumbs down? Semantic orientation applied to unsupervised classification of reviews. In: ACL, pp 417–424. http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P02-1053.pdfVaswani A, Shazeer N, Parmar N, Uszkoreit J, Jones L, Gomez AN, Kaiser L, Polosukhin I (2017) Attention is all you need. In: Proceedings of the 31st international conference on neural information processing systems, NIPS’17. Curran Associates Inc., USA, pp 6000–6010. http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3295222.3295349Wilson T, Hoffmann P, Somasundaran S, Kessler J, Wiebe J, Choi Y, Cardie C, Riloff E, Patwardhan S (2005) OpinionFinder: a system for subjectivity analysis. In: Proceedings of HLT/EMNLP on interactive demonstrations. Association for Computational Linguistics, pp 34–35Zaharias P, Mehlenbacher B (2012) Editorial: exploring user experience (UX) in virtual learning environments. Int J Hum Comput Stud 70(7):475–477. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhcs.2012.05.001Zhang L, Wang S, Liu B (2018) Deep learning for sentiment analysis: a survey. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Data Min Knowl Discov 8(4):e125

    Author Correction: Gap junction protein Connexin-43 is a direct transcriptional regulator of N-cadherin in vivo

    Get PDF
    Correction to: Nature Communications (2018); https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-06368-x, published online 21 September 2018. The original version of this Article contained an error in the spelling of the author Alexandra Schambony, which was incorrectly given as Alexandra Schambon. This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article

    Gap junction protein Connexin-43 is a direct transcriptional regulator of N-cadherin in vivo

    Get PDF
    Connexins are the primary components of gap junctions, providing direct links between cells under many physiological processes. Here, we demonstrate that in addition to this canonical role, Connexins act as transcriptional regulators. We show that Connexin 43 (Cx43) controls neural crest cell migration in vivo by directly regulating N-cadherin transcription. This activity requires interaction between Cx43 carboxy tail and the basic transcription factor-3, which drives the translocation of Cx43 tail to the nucleus. Once in the nucleus they form a complex with PolII which directly binds to the N-cadherin promoter. We found that this mechanism is conserved between amphibian and mammalian cells. Given the strong evolutionary conservation of connexins across vertebrates, this may reflect a common mechanism of gene regulation by a protein whose function was previously ascribed only to gap junctional communication

    Size Matters: Large Objects Capture Attention in Visual Search

    Get PDF
    Can objects or events ever capture one's attention in a purely stimulus-driven manner? A recent review of the literature set out the criteria required to find stimulus-driven attentional capture independent of goal-directed influences, and concluded that no published study has satisfied that criteria. Here visual search experiments assessed whether an irrelevantly large object can capture attention. Capture of attention by this static visual feature was found. The results suggest that a large object can indeed capture attention in a stimulus-driven manner and independent of displaywide features of the task that might encourage a goal-directed bias for large items. It is concluded that these results are either consistent with the stimulus-driven criteria published previously or alternatively consistent with a flexible, goal-directed mechanism of saliency detection

    Multi-Jet Event Rates in Deep Inelastic Scattering and Determination of the Strong Coupling Constant

    Get PDF
    Jet event rates in deep inelastic ep scattering at HERA are investigated applying the modified JADE jet algorithm. The analysis uses data taken with the H1 detector in 1994 and 1995. The data are corrected for detector and hadronization effects and then compared with perturbative QCD predictions using next-to-leading order calculations. The strong coupling constant alpha_S(M_Z^2) is determined evaluating the jet event rates. Values of alpha_S(Q^2) are extracted in four different bins of the negative squared momentum transfer~\qq in the range from 40 GeV2 to 4000 GeV2. A combined fit of the renormalization group equation to these several alpha_S(Q^2) values results in alpha_S(M_Z^2) = 0.117+-0.003(stat)+0.009-0.013(syst)+0.006(jet algorithm).Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, this version to appear in Eur. Phys. J.; it replaces first posted hep-ex/9807019 which had incorrect figure 4

    Measurements of Transverse Energy Flow in Deep-Inelastic Scattering at HERA

    Full text link
    Measurements of transverse energy flow are presented for neutral current deep-inelastic scattering events produced in positron-proton collisions at HERA. The kinematic range covers squared momentum transfers Q^2 from 3.2 to 2,200 GeV^2, the Bjorken scaling variable x from 8.10^{-5} to 0.11 and the hadronic mass W from 66 to 233 GeV. The transverse energy flow is measured in the hadronic centre of mass frame and is studied as a function of Q^2, x, W and pseudorapidity. A comparison is made with QCD based models. The behaviour of the mean transverse energy in the central pseudorapidity region and an interval corresponding to the photon fragmentation region are analysed as a function of Q^2 and W.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Eur. Phys.

    Measurement of D* Meson Cross Sections at HERA and Determination of the Gluon Density in the Proton using NLO QCD

    Get PDF
    With the H1 detector at the ep collider HERA, D* meson production cross sections have been measured in deep inelastic scattering with four-momentum transfers Q^2>2 GeV2 and in photoproduction at energies around W(gamma p)~ 88 GeV and 194 GeV. Next-to-Leading Order QCD calculations are found to describe the differential cross sections within theoretical and experimental uncertainties. Using these calculations, the NLO gluon momentum distribution in the proton, x_g g(x_g), has been extracted in the momentum fraction range 7.5x10^{-4}< x_g <4x10^{-2} at average scales mu^2 =25 to 50 GeV2. The gluon momentum fraction x_g has been obtained from the measured kinematics of the scattered electron and the D* meson in the final state. The results compare well with the gluon distribution obtained from the analysis of scaling violations of the proton structure function F_2.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, submitted to Nucl. Phys.

    Searches at HERA for Squarks in R-Parity Violating Supersymmetry

    Get PDF
    A search for squarks in R-parity violating supersymmetry is performed in e^+p collisions at HERA at a centre of mass energy of 300 GeV, using H1 data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 37 pb^(-1). The direct production of single squarks of any generation in positron-quark fusion via a Yukawa coupling lambda' is considered, taking into account R-parity violating and conserving decays of the squarks. No significant deviation from the Standard Model expectation is found. The results are interpreted in terms of constraints within the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM), the constrained MSSM and the minimal Supergravity model, and their sensitivity to the model parameters is studied in detail. For a Yukawa coupling of electromagnetic strength, squark masses below 260 GeV are excluded at 95% confidence level in a large part of the parameter space. For a 100 times smaller coupling strength masses up to 182 GeV are excluded.Comment: 32 pages, 14 figures, 3 table
    corecore