scholarly journals An improved PSO algorithm coupling with prior information for classification of large scale dataset

Author(s):  
Juanjuan Tu ◽  
Wenlan Zhou ◽  
Hongmei Li
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 114
Author(s):  
Stefan Helmstetter ◽  
Heiko Paulheim

The problem of automatic detection of fake news in social media, e.g., on Twitter, has recently drawn some attention. Although, from a technical perspective, it can be regarded as a straight-forward, binary classification problem, the major challenge is the collection of large enough training corpora, since manual annotation of tweets as fake or non-fake news is an expensive and tedious endeavor, and recent approaches utilizing distributional semantics require large training corpora. In this paper, we introduce an alternative approach for creating a large-scale dataset for tweet classification with minimal user intervention. The approach relies on weak supervision and automatically collects a large-scale, but very noisy, training dataset comprising hundreds of thousands of tweets. As a weak supervision signal, we label tweets by their source, i.e., trustworthy or untrustworthy source, and train a classifier on this dataset. We then use that classifier for a different classification target, i.e., the classification of fake and non-fake tweets. Although the labels are not accurate according to the new classification target (not all tweets by an untrustworthy source need to be fake news, and vice versa), we show that despite this unclean, inaccurate dataset, the results are comparable to those achieved using a manually labeled set of tweets. Moreover, we show that the combination of the large-scale noisy dataset with a human labeled one yields more advantageous results than either of the two alone.


Author(s):  
Siti Mariyam Shamsuddin ◽  
Anazida Zainal ◽  
Norfadzila Mohd Yusof

Clustering is the procedure of recognising classes of patterns that occur in the environment and assigning each pattern to its relevant. Unlike classical statistical methods, self-organising map (SOM) does not require any prior knowledge about the statistical distribution of the patterns in the environment. In this study, an alternative classification of self-organising neural networks, known as multilevel learning, was proposed to solve the task of pattern separation. The performance of standard SOM and multilevel SOM were evaluated with different distance or dissimilarity measures in retrieving similarity between patterns. The purpose of this analysis was to evaluate the quality of map produced by SOM learning using different distance measures in representing a given dataset. Based on the results obtained from both SOM methods, predictions can be made for the unknown samples. The results showed that multilevel SOM learning gives better classification rate for small and medium scale datasets, but not for large scale dataset.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Jin ◽  
Dan Wu

The large-scale boom system, such as the five-arm concrete pump truck with the arm length of 36–65 meters, usually operates in an unknown dynamic outdoor environment. The motion safety and the energy consumption are thus the two vital measurements to the effectiveness of the trajectory planning for the large-scale boom system. Due to the redundancy of the large-scale boom system and some drawbacks of the original particle swarm optimization (PSO) algorithm, an improved PSO algorithm is presented to solve the inverse kinematic problem of the redundant large-scale boom system. By the improved PSO algorithm, the energy-saving trajectory planning of the large-scale boom system that operates in a workspace without obstacles and with obstacles is optimized, which considers different important degrees of the subgoals, respectively. The optimal results from the simulation study and the practical application verify the effectiveness of the proposed planning strategy. At the same time, the performance of the improved strategy is compared with that of the traditional, and the superiority is further demonstrated.


2009 ◽  
pp. 27-53
Author(s):  
A. Yu. Kudryavtsev

Diversity of plant communities in the nature reserve “Privolzhskaya Forest-Steppe”, Ostrovtsovsky area, is analyzed on the basis of the large-scale vegetation mapping data from 2000. The plant community classi­fication based on the Russian ecologic-phytocoenotic approach is carried out. 12 plant formations and 21 associations are distinguished according to dominant species and a combination of ecologic-phytocoenotic groups of species. A list of vegetation classification units as well as the characteristics of theshrub and woody communities are given in this paper.


1996 ◽  
pp. 64-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nguen Nghia Thin ◽  
Nguen Ba Thu ◽  
Tran Van Thuy

The tropical seasonal rainy evergreen broad-leaved forest vegetation of the Cucphoung National Park has been classified and the distribution of plant communities has been shown on the map using the relations of vegetation to geology, geomorphology and pedology. The method of vegetation mapping includes: 1) the identifying of vegetation types in the remote-sensed materials (aerial photographs and satellite images); 2) field work to compile the interpretation keys and to characterize all the communities of a study area; 3) compilation of the final vegetation map using the combined information. In the classification presented a number of different level vegetation units have been identified: formation classes (3), formation sub-classes (3), formation groups (3), formations (4), subformations (10) and communities (19). Communities have been taken as mapping units. So in the vegetation map of the National Park 19 vegetation categories has been shown altogether, among them 13 are natural primary communities, and 6 are the secondary, anthropogenic ones. The secondary succession goes through 3 main stages: grassland herbaceous xerophytic vegetation, xerophytic scrub, dense forest.


2009 ◽  
Vol 29 (8) ◽  
pp. 2245-2249 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiang XU ◽  
Dong-bo ZHANG ◽  
Hui-xian HUANG ◽  
Zi-wen LIU

2013 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 319-322
Author(s):  
Min ZHANG ◽  
Qiang HUANG ◽  
Zhouzhao XU ◽  
Baizhuang JIANG

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