scholarly journals Experiments on pattern-based relation learning

Author(s):  
Willy Yap ◽  
Timothy Baldwin
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Zhenping Xie ◽  
Liyuan Ren ◽  
Qianyi Zhan ◽  
Yuan Liu

2014 ◽  
Vol 139 ◽  
pp. 34-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingxia Liu ◽  
Daoqiang Zhang ◽  
Songcan Chen

Author(s):  
Haocong Rao ◽  
Shihao Xu ◽  
Xiping Hu ◽  
Jun Cheng ◽  
Bin Hu

Skeleton-based person re-identification (Re-ID) is an emerging open topic providing great value for safety-critical applications. Existing methods typically extract hand-crafted features or model skeleton dynamics from the trajectory of body joints, while they rarely explore valuable relation information contained in body structure or motion. To fully explore body relations, we construct graphs to model human skeletons from different levels, and for the first time propose a Multi-level Graph encoding approach with Structural-Collaborative Relation learning (MG-SCR) to encode discriminative graph features for person Re-ID. Specifically, considering that structurally-connected body components are highly correlated in a skeleton, we first propose a multi-head structural relation layer to learn different relations of neighbor body-component nodes in graphs, which helps aggregate key correlative features for effective node representations. Second, inspired by the fact that body-component collaboration in walking usually carries recognizable patterns, we propose a cross-level collaborative relation layer to infer collaboration between different level components, so as to capture more discriminative skeleton graph features. Finally, to enhance graph dynamics encoding, we propose a novel self-supervised sparse sequential prediction task for model pre-training, which facilitates encoding high-level graph semantics for person Re-ID. MG-SCR outperforms state-of-the-art skeleton-based methods, and it achieves superior performance to many multi-modal methods that utilize extra RGB or depth features. Our codes are available at https://github.com/Kali-Hac/MG-SCR.


Author(s):  
Chiara Alzetta ◽  
Alessio Miaschi ◽  
Felice Dell’Orletta ◽  
Frosina Koceva ◽  
Ilaria Torre

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liangming Pan ◽  
Chengjiang Li ◽  
Juanzi Li ◽  
Jie Tang
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Wei Wang ◽  
Payam M. Barnaghi ◽  
Andrzej Bargiela

The problem of learning concept hierarchies and terminological ontologies can be divided into two sub-tasks: concept extraction and relation learning. The authors of this chapter describe a novel approach to learn relations automatically from unstructured text corpus based on probabilistic topic models. The authors provide definition (Information Theory Principle for Concept Relationship) and quantitative measure for establishing “broader” (or “narrower”) and “related” relations between concepts. They present a relation learning algorithm to automatically interconnect concepts into concept hierarchies and terminological ontologies with the probabilistic topic models learned. In this experiment, around 7,000 ontology statements expressed in terms of “broader” and “related” relations are generated using different combination of model parameters. The ontology statements are evaluated by domain experts and the results show that the highest precision of the learned ontologies is around 86.6% and structures of learned ontologies remain stable when values of the parameters are changed in the ontology learning algorithm.


Author(s):  
Lianghao Xia ◽  
Chao Huang ◽  
Yong Xu ◽  
Peng Dai ◽  
Liefeng Bo ◽  
...  

Crime prediction is crucial for public safety and resource optimization, yet is very challenging due to two aspects: i) the dynamics of criminal patterns across time and space, crime events are distributed unevenly on both spatial and temporal domains; ii) time-evolving dependencies between different types of crimes (e.g., Theft, Robbery, Assault, Damage) which reveal fine-grained semantics of crimes. To tackle these challenges, we propose Spatial-Temporal Sequential Hypergraph Network (ST-SHN) to collectively encode complex crime spatial-temporal patterns as well as the underlying category-wise crime semantic relationships. In specific, to handle spatial-temporal dynamics under the long-range and global context, we design a graph-structured message passing architecture with the integration of the hypergraph learning paradigm. To capture category-wise crime heterogeneous relations in a dynamic environment, we introduce a multi-channel routing mechanism to learn the time-evolving structural dependency across crime types. We conduct extensive experiments on two real-word datasets, showing that our proposed ST-SHN framework can significantly improve the prediction performance as compared to various state-of-the-art baselines. The source code is available at https://github.com/akaxlh/ST-SHN.


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