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Browsing CRACS - Other Publications by Author "Costa,J"
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ItemCrowdtargeting: Making crowds more personal( 2013) Costa,J ; Silva,C ; Ribeiro,B ; Mário João AntunesCrowd sourcing is a bubbling research topic that has the potential to be applied in numerous online and social scenarios. It consists on obtaining services or information by soliciting contributions from a large group of people. However, the question of defining the appropriate scope of a crowd to tackle each scenario is still open. In this work we compare two approaches to define the scope of a crowd in a classification problem, casted as a recommendation system. We propose a similarity measure to determine the closeness of a specific user to each crowd contributor and hence to define the appropriate crowd scope. We compare different levels of customization using crowd-based information, allowing non-experts classification by crowds to be tuned to substitute the user profile definition. Results on a real recommendation data set show the potential of making crowds more personal, i.e. of tuning the crowd to the crowd target. © 2013 IEEE.
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ItemCustomized crowds and active learning to improve classification( 2013) Costa,J ; Silva,C ; Mário João Antunes ; Ribeiro,BTraditional classification algorithms can be limited in their performance when a specific user is targeted. User preferences, e.g. in recommendation systems, constitute a challenge for learning algorithms. Additionally, in recent years user's interaction through crowdsourcing has drawn significant interest, although its use in learning settings is still underused. In this work we focus on an active strategy that uses crowd-based non-expert information to appropriately tackle the problem of capturing the drift between user preferences in a recommendation system. The proposed method combines two main ideas: to apply active strategies for adaptation to each user; to implement crowdsourcing to avoid excessive user feedback. A similitude technique is put forward to optimize the choice of the more appropriate similitude-wise crowd, under the guidance of basic user feedback. The proposed active learning framework allows non-experts classification performed by crowds to be used to define the user profile, mitigating the labeling effort normally requested to the user. The framework is designed to be generic and suitable to be applied, to different' scenarios, whilst customizable for each specific user. A case study on humor classification scenario is used to demonstrate experimentally that the approach can improve baseline active results.
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ItemDefining Semantic Meta-hashtags for Twitter Classification( 2013) Costa,J ; Silva,C ; Mário João Antunes ; Ribeiro,BGiven the wide spread of social networks, research efforts to retrieve information using tagging from social networks communications have increased. In particular, in Twitter social network, hashtags are widely used to define a shared context for events or topics. While this is a common practice often the hashtags freely introduced by the user become easily biased. In this paper, we propose to deal with this bias defining semantic meta-hashtags by clustering similar messages to improve the classification. First, we use the user-defined hashtags as the Twitter message class labels. Then, we apply the meta-hashtag approach to boost the performance of the message classification. The meta-hashtag approach is tested in a Twitter-based dataset constructed by requesting public tweets to the Twitter API. The experimental results yielded by comparing a baseline model based on user-defined hashtags with the clustered meta-hashtag approach show that the overall classification is improved. It is concluded that by incorporating semantics in the meta-hashtag model can have impact in different applications, e.g. recommendation systems, event detection or crowdsourcing.