scholarly journals A deep-learning model for predictive archaeology and archaeological community detection

Author(s):  
Abraham Resler ◽  
Reuven Yeshurun ◽  
Filipe Natalio ◽  
Raja Giryes

AbstractDeep learning is a powerful tool for exploring large datasets and discovering new patterns. This work presents an account of a metric learning-based deep convolutional neural network (CNN) applied to an archaeological dataset. The proposed account speaks of three stages: training, testing/validating, and community detection. Several thousand artefact images, ranging from the Lower Palaeolithic period (1.4 million years ago) to the Late Islamic period (fourteenth century AD), were used to train the model (i.e., the CNN), to discern artefacts by site and period. After training, it attained a comparable accuracy to archaeologists in various periods. In order to test the model, it was called to identify new query images according to similarities with known (training) images. Validation blinding experiments showed that while archaeologists performed as well as the model within their field of expertise, they fell behind concerning other periods. Lastly, a community detection algorithm based on the confusion matrix data was used to discern affiliations across sites. A case-study on Levantine Natufian artefacts demonstrated the algorithm’s capacity to discern meaningful connections. As such, the model has the potential to reveal yet unknown patterns in archaeological data.

2021 ◽  
Vol 401 ◽  
pp. 126012
Author(s):  
Shudong Li ◽  
Laiyuan Jiang ◽  
Xiaobo Wu ◽  
Weihong Han ◽  
Dawei Zhao ◽  
...  

Entropy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 680
Author(s):  
Hanyang Lin ◽  
Yongzhao Zhan ◽  
Zizheng Zhao ◽  
Yuzhong Chen ◽  
Chen Dong

There is a wealth of information in real-world social networks. In addition to the topology information, the vertices or edges of a social network often have attributes, with many of the overlapping vertices belonging to several communities simultaneously. It is challenging to fully utilize the additional attribute information to detect overlapping communities. In this paper, we first propose an overlapping community detection algorithm based on an augmented attribute graph. An improved weight adjustment strategy for attributes is embedded in the algorithm to help detect overlapping communities more accurately. Second, we enhance the algorithm to automatically determine the number of communities by a node-density-based fuzzy k-medoids process. Extensive experiments on both synthetic and real-world datasets demonstrate that the proposed algorithms can effectively detect overlapping communities with fewer parameters compared to the baseline methods.


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