scholarly journals Special issue on statistical learning of natural language structured input and output

2012 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-153
Author(s):  
LLUÍS MÀRQUEZ ◽  
ALESSANDRO MOSCHITTI

AbstractDuring last decade, machine learning and, in particular, statistical approaches have become more and more important for research in Natural Language Processing (NLP) and Computational Linguistics. Nowadays, most stakeholders of the field use machine learning, as it can significantly enhance both system design and performance. However, machine learning requires careful parameter tuning and feature engineering for representing language phenomena. The latter becomes more complex when the system input/output data is structured, since the designer has both to (i) engineer features for representing structure and model interdependent layers of information, which is usually a non-trivial task; and (ii) generate a structured output using classifiers, which, in their original form, were developed only for classification or regression. Research in empirical NLP has been tackling this problem by constructing output structures as a combination of the predictions of independent local classifiers, eventually applying post-processing heuristics to correct incompatible outputs by enforcing global properties. More recently, some advances of the statistical learning theory, namely structured output spaces and kernel methods, have brought techniques for directly encoding dependencies between data items in a learning algorithm that performs global optimization. Within this framework, this special issue aims at studying, comparing, and reconciling the typical domain/task-specific NLP approaches to structured data with the most advanced machine learning methods. In particular, the selected papers analyze the use of diverse structured input/output approaches, ranging from re-ranking to joint constraint-based global models, for diverse natural language tasks, i.e., document ranking, syntactic parsing, sequence supertagging, and relation extraction between terms and entities. Overall, the experience with this special issue shows that, although a definitive unifying theory for encoding and generating structured information in NLP applications is still far from being shaped, some interesting and effective best practice can be defined to guide practitioners in modeling their own natural language application on complex data.

2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-144
Author(s):  
ANSSI YLI-JYRÄ ◽  
ANDRÁS KORNAI ◽  
JACQUES SAKAROVITCH

For the past two decades, specialised events on finite-state methods have been successful in presenting interesting studies on natural language processing to the public through journals and collections. The FSMNLP workshops have become well-known among researchers and are now the main forum of the Association for Computational Linguistics' (ACL) Special Interest Group on Finite-State Methods (SIGFSM). The current issue on finite-state methods and models in natural language processing was planned in 2008 in this context as a response to a call for special issue proposals. In 2010, the issue received a total of sixteen submissions, some of which were extended and updated versions of workshop papers, and others which were completely new. The final selection, consisting of only seven papers that could fit into one issue, is not fully representative, but complements the prior special issues in a nice way. The selected papers showcase a few areas where finite-state methods have less than obvious and sometimes even groundbreaking relevance to natural language processing (NLP) applications.


2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-255
Author(s):  
Marta R. Costa-jussà ◽  
Cristina España-Bonet ◽  
Pascale Fung ◽  
Noah A. Smith

We introduce the Computational Linguistics special issue on Multilingual and Interlingual Semantic Representations for Natural Language Processing. We situate the special issue’s five articles in the context of our fast-changing field, explaining our motivation for this project. We offer a brief summary of the work in the issue, which includes developments on lexical and sentential semantic representations, from symbolic and neural perspectives.


2003 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-3 ◽  
Author(s):  
LAURI KARTTUNEN ◽  
KIMMO KOSKENNIEMI ◽  
GERTJAN VAN NOORD

Finite state methods have been in common use in various areas of natural language processing (NLP) for many years. A series of specialized workshops in this area illustrates this. In 1996, András Kornai organized a very successful workshop entitled Extended Finite State Models of Language. One of the results of that workshop was a special issue of Natural Language Engineering (Volume 2, Number 4). In 1998, Kemal Oflazer organized a workshop called Finite State Methods in Natural Language Processing. A selection of submissions for this workshop were later included in a special issue of Computational Linguistics (Volume 26, Number 1). Inspired by these events, Lauri Karttunen, Kimmo Koskenniemi and Gertjan van Noord took the initiative for a workshop on finite state methods in NLP in Helsinki, as part of the European Summer School in Language, Logic and Information. As a related special event, the 20th anniversary of two-level morphology was celebrated. The appreciation of these events led us to believe that once again it should be possible, with some additional submissions, to compose an interesting special issue of this journal.


2021 ◽  
pp. 019262332199375
Author(s):  
Famke Aeffner ◽  
Tobias Sing ◽  
Oliver C. Turner

For decades, it has been postulated that digital pathology is the future. By now it is safe to say that we are living that future. Digital pathology has expanded into all aspects of pathology, including human diagnostic pathology, veterinary diagnostics, research, drug development, regulatory toxicologic pathology primary reads, and peer review. Digital tissue image analysis has enabled users to extract quantitative and complex data from digitized whole-slide images. The following editorial provides an overview of the content of this special issue of Toxicologic Pathology to highlight the range of key topics that are included in this compilation. In addition, the editors provide a commentary on important current aspects to consider in this space, such as accessibility of publication content to the machine learning-novice pathologist, the importance of adequate test set selection, and allowing for data reproducibility.


2003 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerold Schneider

Natural Language is highly ambiguous, on every level. This article describes a fast broad-coverage state-of-the-art parser that uses a carefully hand-written grammar and probability-based machine learning approaches on the syntactic level. It is shown in detail which statistical learning models based on Maximum-Likelihood Estimation (MLE) can support a highly developed linguistic grammar in the disambiguation process.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sukanya Panja ◽  
Sarra Rahem ◽  
Cassandra J. Chu ◽  
Antonina Mitrofanova

Background: In recent years, the availability of high throughput technologies, establishment of large molecular patient data repositories, and advancement in computing power and storage have allowed elucidation of complex mechanisms implicated in therapeutic response in cancer patients. The breadth and depth of such data, alongside experimental noise and missing values, requires a sophisticated human-machine interaction that would allow effective learning from complex data and accurate forecasting of future outcomes, ideally embedded in the core of machine learning design. Objective: In this review, we will discuss machine learning techniques utilized for modeling of treatment response in cancer, including Random Forests, support vector machines, neural networks, and linear and logistic regression. We will overview their mathematical foundations and discuss their limitations and alternative approaches all in light of their application to therapeutic response modeling in cancer. Conclusion: We hypothesize that the increase in the number of patient profiles and potential temporal monitoring of patient data will define even more complex techniques, such as deep learning and causal analysis, as central players in therapeutic response modeling.


Author(s):  
Rohan Pandey ◽  
Vaibhav Gautam ◽  
Ridam Pal ◽  
Harsh Bandhey ◽  
Lovedeep Singh Dhingra ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND The COVID-19 pandemic has uncovered the potential of digital misinformation in shaping the health of nations. The deluge of unverified information that spreads faster than the epidemic itself is an unprecedented phenomenon that has put millions of lives in danger. Mitigating this ‘Infodemic’ requires strong health messaging systems that are engaging, vernacular, scalable, effective and continuously learn the new patterns of misinformation. OBJECTIVE We created WashKaro, a multi-pronged intervention for mitigating misinformation through conversational AI, machine translation and natural language processing. WashKaro provides the right information matched against WHO guidelines through AI, and delivers it in the right format in local languages. METHODS We theorize (i) an NLP based AI engine that could continuously incorporate user feedback to improve relevance of information, (ii) bite sized audio in the local language to improve penetrance in a country with skewed gender literacy ratios, and (iii) conversational but interactive AI engagement with users towards an increased health awareness in the community. RESULTS A total of 5026 people who downloaded the app during the study window, among those 1545 were active users. Our study shows that 3.4 times more females engaged with the App in Hindi as compared to males, the relevance of AI-filtered news content doubled within 45 days of continuous machine learning, and the prudence of integrated AI chatbot “Satya” increased thus proving the usefulness of an mHealth platform to mitigate health misinformation. CONCLUSIONS We conclude that a multi-pronged machine learning application delivering vernacular bite-sized audios and conversational AI is an effective approach to mitigate health misinformation. CLINICALTRIAL Not Applicable


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