Bangla Abusive Language Detection using Machine Learning on Radio Message Gateway

Author(s):  
Sumaiya Salim Ritu ◽  
Joysurya Mondal ◽  
Md. Moinu Mia ◽  
Ahmed Al Marouf
Author(s):  
Muhammad Pervez Akhter ◽  
Zheng Jiangbin ◽  
Irfan Raza Naqvi ◽  
Mohammed AbdelMajeed ◽  
Tehseen Zia

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-22
Author(s):  
Weibo Wang ◽  
Aminul Islam ◽  
Abidalrahman Moh’d ◽  
Axel J. Soto ◽  
Evangelos E. Milios

Abstract Technical writing in professional environments, such as user manual authoring, requires the use of uniform language. Nonuniform language refers to sentences in a technical document that are intended to have the same meaning within a similar context, but use different words or writing style. Addressing this nonuniformity problem requires the performance of two tasks. The first task, which we named nonuniform language detection (NLD), is detecting such sentences. We propose an NLD method that utilizes different similarity algorithms at lexical, syntactic, semantic and pragmatic levels. Different features are extracted and integrated by applying a machine learning classification method. The second task, which we named nonuniform language correction (NLC), is deciding which sentence among the detected ones is more appropriate for that context. To address this problem, we propose an NLC method that combines contraction removal, near-synonym choice, and text readability comparison. We tested our methods using smartphone user manuals. We finally compared our methods against state-of-the-art methods in paraphrase detection (for NLD) and against expert annotators (for both NLD and NLC). The experiments demonstrate that the proposed methods achieve performance that matches expert annotators.


2020 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Myrthe Faber

Abstract Gilead et al. state that abstraction supports mental travel, and that mental travel critically relies on abstraction. I propose an important addition to this theoretical framework, namely that mental travel might also support abstraction. Specifically, I argue that spontaneous mental travel (mind wandering), much like data augmentation in machine learning, provides variability in mental content and context necessary for abstraction.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammed J. Zaki ◽  
Wagner Meira, Jr
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Peter Deisenroth ◽  
A. Aldo Faisal ◽  
Cheng Soon Ong
Keyword(s):  

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