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61
Analyzing COVID-19 Medical Papers Using Artificial Intelligence: Insights for Researchers and Medical Professionals
In: Big Data and Cognitive Computing; Volume 6; Issue 1; Pages: 4 (2022)
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62
OntoDomus: A Semantic Model for Ambient Assisted Living System Based on Smart Homes
In: Electronics; Volume 11; Issue 7; Pages: 1143 (2022)
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63
A Multi-Entity Knowledge Joint Extraction Method of Communication Equipment Faults for Industrial IoT
In: Electronics; Volume 11; Issue 7; Pages: 979 (2022)
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64
Workshop on Blood Loss Quantification in Obstetrics: Improving Medical Student Learning through Clinical Simulation
In: Healthcare; Volume 10; Issue 2; Pages: 399 (2022)
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65
Using Peircean Semiotics as the Grounding of Cognition
In: Proceedings; Volume 81; Issue 1; Pages: 135 (2022)
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66
Preservice Teachers’ Knowledge and Attitudes toward Digital-Game-Based Language Learning
In: Education Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 3; Pages: 182 (2022)
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67
CSKG: The Commonsense Knowledge Graph ...
Ilievski, Filip. - : Zenodo, 2022
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68
CSKG: The Commonsense Knowledge Graph ...
Ilievski, Filip. - : Zenodo, 2022
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69
Practical English speaking language ...
SH.J.Mamatkulova. - : Zenodo, 2022
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70
Practical English speaking language ...
SH.J.Mamatkulova. - : Zenodo, 2022
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71
CONDITIONS OF INDEPENDENT STUDY IN TEACHING STUDENTS FOREIGN LANGUAGES ...
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72
CONDITIONS OF INDEPENDENT STUDY IN TEACHING STUDENTS FOREIGN LANGUAGES ...
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73
Formalization of AMR Inference via Hybrid Logic Tableaux ...
Goldner, Eli Tecumseh. - : Brandeis University, 2022
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74
Toward an Epistemic Web
In: 197 ; RatSWD Working Paper Series ; 22 (2022)
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75
The third wave of the IAB-BAMF-SOEP Survey of Refugees: Refugees are improving their German language skills and continue to feel welcome in Germany
In: 1-2020 ; BAMF-Brief Analysis ; 18 (2022)
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76
Valuing the local within the global: A discourse analysis of professional development in a U.S.-Kurdish transnational university partnership
In: Journal of Global Education and Research (2022)
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77
PRÁTICAS CORPORAIS COMO CONCEITO? ; ¿PRÁCTICAS CORPORALES COMO CONCEPTO? ; BODILY PRACTICES AS A CONCEPT?
In: Movimento (Porto Alegre); v. 28, jan./dez. 2022; e28001 ; 1982-8918 ; 0104-754X (2022)
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78
Documenting the gender gap in Indian Wikipedia communities: Findings from a qualitative pilot study
In: First Monday; Volume 27, Number 3 - 7 March 2022 ; 1396-0466 (2022)
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79
Cambridge Psycholinguistic Inventory of Christian Beliefs: A registered report of construct validity, internal consistency and test-retest reliability.
Clackson, Kaili; Pohran, Nadya; Galli, Riccardo M. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022. : Behav Res Methods, 2022
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80
Towards a theoretical understanding of word and relation representation
Allen, Carl S.. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2022
Abstract: Representing words by vectors of numbers, known as word embeddings, enables computational reasoning over words and is foundational to automating tasks involving natural language. For example, by crafting word embeddings so that similar words have similar valued embeddings, often thought of as nearby points in a semantic space, word similarity can be readily assessed using a variety of metrics. In contrast, judging whether two words are similar from more common representations, such as their English spelling, is often impossible (e.g. cat/feline); and to predetermine and store all similarities between all words is prohibitively time-consuming, memory intensive and subjective. As a succinct means of representing words – or, perhaps, the concepts that words themselves represent – word embeddings also relate to information theory and cognitive science. Numerous algorithms have been proposed to learn word embeddings from different data sources, such as large text corpora, document collections and “knowledge graphs” – compilations of facts in the form hsubject entity, relation, object entityi, e.g. hEdinburgh, capital of, Scotlandi. The broad aim of these algorithms is to capture information from the data in the components of each word embedding that is useful for a certain task or suite of tasks, such as detecting sentiment in text, identifying the topic of a document, or predicting whether a given fact is true or false. In this thesis, we focus on word embeddings learned from text corpora and knowledge graphs. Several well-known algorithms learn word embeddings from text on an unsupervised (or, more recently, self-supervised) basis by learning to predict context words that occur around each word, e.g. word2vec (Mikolov et al., 2013a,b) and GloVe (Pennington et al., 2014). The parameters of word embeddings learned in this way are known to reflect word co-occurrence statistics, but how they capture semantic meaning has been largely unclear. Knowledge graph representation models learn representations both of entities, which include words, people, places, etc., and binary relations between them. Representations are typically learned by training the model to predict known true facts of the knowledge graph in a supervised manner. Despite steady improvements in the accuracy with which knowledge graph representation models are able to predict facts, both seen and unseen during training, little is understood of the latent structure that allows them to do so. This limited understanding of how latent semantic structure is encoded in the geometry of word embeddings and knowledge graph representations makes a principled direction for improving their performance, reliability or interpretability unclear. To address this: 1. we theoretically justify the empirical observation that particular geometric relationships between word embeddings learned by algorithms such as word2vec and GloVe correspond to semantic relations between words; and 2. we extend this correspondence between semantics and geometry to the entities and relations of knowledge graphs, providing a model for the latent structure of knowledge graph representation linked to that of word embeddings. We first give a probabilistic explanation for why word embeddings of analogies – phrases of the form “man is to king as woman is to queen” – often appear to approximate a parallelogram. This “analogy phenomenon” has generated much intrigue since word embeddings are not trained to achieve it, yet it allows many analogies to be “solved” simply by adding and subtracting their embeddings, e.g. wqueen ≈ wking − wman + wwoman. Similar probabilistic rationale is given to explain how semantic relations such as similarity and paraphrase are encoded in the relative geometry of word embeddings. Lastly, we extend this correspondence, between semantics and embedding geometry, to the specific relations of knowledge graphs. We derive a hierarchical categorisation of relation types and, for each type, identify the notional geometric relationship between word embeddings of related entities. This gives a theoretical basis for relation representation against which we can contrast a range of knowledge graph representation models. By analysing properties of their representations and their relation-by-relation performance, we show that the closer the agreement between how a model represents a relation and our theoretically-inspired basis, the better the model performs. Indeed, a knowledge graph representation model inspired by this research achieved state-of-the-art performance (Balaˇzevi´c et al., 2019b).
Keyword: automating language tasks; embeddings; knowledge graphs; semantic properties; semantic relationships
URL: https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38601
https://doi.org/10.7488/era/1864
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