A User-Friendly Interface for Fingerprint Recognition Systems Based on Natural Language Processing

Author(s):  
Vincenzo Conti ◽  
Carmelo Militello ◽  
Salvatore Vitabile ◽  
Filippo Sorbello
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan Ji ◽  
Yu Sun

The digital age gives us access to a multitude of both information and mediums in which we can interpret information. A majority of the time, many people find interpreting such information difficult as the medium may not be as user friendly as possible. This project has examined the inquiry of how one can identify specific information in a given text based on a question. This inquiry is intended to streamline one's ability to determine the relevance of a given text relative to his objective. The project has an overall 80% success rate given 10 articles with three questions asked per article. This success rate indicates that this project is likely applicable to those who are asking for content level questions within an article.


AI Magazine ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anton Leuski ◽  
David Traum

NPCEditor is a system for building a natural language processing component for virtual humans capable of engaging a user in spoken dialog on a limited domain. It uses statistical language classification technology for mapping from a user’s text input to system responses. NPCEditor provides a user-friendly editor for creating effective virtual humans quickly. It has been deployed as a part of various virtual human systems in several applications.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 1740-1747
Author(s):  
Anton Leuski ◽  
David Traum

NPCEditor is a system for building a natural language processing component for virtual humans capable of engaging a user in spoken dialog on a limited domain. It uses a statistical language classification technology for mapping from user's text input to system responses. NPCEditor provides a user-friendly editor for creating effective virtual humans quickly. It has been deployed as a part of various virtual human systems in several applications.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (02) ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Chidinma A. Nwafor ◽  
Ikechukwu E. Onyenwe

Automatic multiple-choice question generation (MCQG) is a useful yet challenging task in Natural Language Processing (NLP). It is the task of automatic generation of correct and relevant questions from textual data. Despite its usefulness, manually creating sizeable, meaningful and relevant questions is a time-consuming and challenging task for teachers. In this paper, we present an NLP-based system for automatic MCQG for Computer-Based Testing Examination (CBTE).We used NLP technique to extract keywords that are important words in a given lesson material. To validate that the system is not perverse, five lesson materials were used to check the effectiveness and efficiency of the system. The manually extracted keywords by the teacher were compared to the auto-generated keywords and the result shows that the system was capable of extracting keywords from lesson materials in setting examinable questions. This outcome is presented in a user-friendly interface for easy accessibility.


Author(s):  
Raghav Awasthi ◽  
Ridam Pal ◽  
Pradeep Singh ◽  
Aditya Nagori ◽  
Suryatej Reddy ◽  
...  

AbstractThe flood of conflicting COVID-19 research has revealed that COVID-19 continues to be an enigma. Although more than 14,000 research articles on COVID-19 have been published with the disease taking a pandemic proportion, clinicians and researchers are struggling to distill knowledge for furthering clinical management and research. In this study, we address this gap for a targeted user group, i.e. clinicians, researchers, and policymakers by applying natural language processing to develop a CovidNLP dashboard in order to speed up knowledge discovery. The WHO has created a repository of about more than 5000 peer-reviewed and curated research articles on varied aspects including epidemiology, clinical features, diagnosis, treatment, social factors, and economics. We summarised all the articles in the WHO Database through an extractive summarizer followed by an exploration of the feature space using word embeddings which were then used to visualize the summarized associations of COVID-19 as found in the text. Clinicians, researchers, and policymakers will not only discover the direct effects of COVID-19 but also the systematic implications such as the anticipated rise in TB and cancer mortality due to the non-availability of drugs during the export lockdown as highlighted by our models. These demonstrate the utility of mining massive literature with natural language processing for rapid distillation and knowledge updates. This can help the users understand, synthesize, and take pre-emptive action with the available peer-reviewed evidence on COVID-19. Our models will be continuously updated with new literature and we have made our resource CovidNLP publicly available in a user-friendly fashion at http://covidnlp.tavlab.iiitd.edu.in/.Data Availability StatementAll the data used in this study are publicly available from the WHO Covid-19 Global Literature on coronavirus disease maintained at https://search.bvsalud.org/global-literature-on-novel-coronavirus-2019-ncov/. Our analysis and the interactive resource CovidNLP is publicly available in a user friendly fashion at http://covidnlp.tavlab.iiitd.edu.in


2020 ◽  
pp. 3-17
Author(s):  
Peter Nabende

Natural Language Processing for under-resourced languages is now a mainstream research area. However, there are limited studies on Natural Language Processing applications for many indigenous East African languages. As a contribution to covering the current gap of knowledge, this paper focuses on evaluating the application of well-established machine translation methods for one heavily under-resourced indigenous East African language called Lumasaaba. Specifically, we review the most common machine translation methods in the context of Lumasaaba including both rule-based and data-driven methods. Then we apply a state of the art data-driven machine translation method to learn models for automating translation between Lumasaaba and English using a very limited data set of parallel sentences. Automatic evaluation results show that a transformer-based Neural Machine Translation model architecture leads to consistently better BLEU scores than the recurrent neural network-based models. Moreover, the automatically generated translations can be comprehended to a reasonable extent and are usually associated with the source language input.


Diabetes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 68 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1243-P
Author(s):  
JIANMIN WU ◽  
FRITHA J. MORRISON ◽  
ZHENXIANG ZHAO ◽  
XUANYAO HE ◽  
MARIA SHUBINA ◽  
...  

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