NLP 101: Towards Natural Language Processing

10 steps to build a strong NLP foundation

Under the umbrella of data science fields, natural language processing (NLP) is one of the most famous and important subfields. Natural language processing is a computer science field that gives computers the ability to understand human — natural — languages.

… Now, speech technologies are becoming as famous as written text technologies.  Read More

#nlp

Analysis of crimes in Mexico during 2017 with Machine Learning techniques (Cluster Analysis): Comparison Elbow Method and Silhouette Method

Using Machine Learning to identify problematic regions in Mexico.

Crime issues always has been a delicate topic of great interest in Mexico. Some people believe that there is a relationship between the number and the type of crime with the country’s region, that’s why in the following work an analysis will be made with the data from the National Survey of Victimization and Perception of Public Security ( ENVIPE ) 2018 (which aim to estimate the number of crimes committed during 2017) in order to be compared to Peace Index Mexico ( IPM) 2018 Read More

#machine-learning

Nothing to be ashamed of: sex robots for older adults with disabilities

This paper spotlights ways in which sexual capacities relate to central human capabilities, such as the ability to generate a personally meaningful story of one’s life; be physically, mentally and emotionally healthy; experience bodily integrity; affiliate and bond with others; feel and express a range of human emotions; and choose a plan of life. It sets forth a dignity-based argument for affording older people access to sex robots as part of reasonable efforts to support their central human capabilities at a floor level. The argument develops stepwise: (1) first, I dispel ageism and negative stereotypes about later-life sexuality, showing their deep historical roots in medicine and science; (2) second, I set forth a positive argument, grounded in capability accounts of justice, for deploying sex robots for older people with disabilities; (3) finally, after responding to objections, I conclude that sex robots are a reasonable way to support later-life sexuality for persons with disabilities. While often depicted as a product for younger, able-bodied people, this paper is a bid for reimagining sex robots as a product for older, disabled people. Read More

#ethics, #robotics

A Mysterious Obama Biography Was Selling Like Crazy on Amazon. Did a Human Write It?

Update, Nov. 20, 2020, at 12:03 p.m.: After creeping into the Top 100 on Amazon, this title was removed from the site on Friday morning. Other “University Press” books are still for sale, however.

Perhaps you’ve heard that there is an exciting new Barack Obama book that everyone’s talking about! I’m not talking about A Promised Land, the 751-page memoir and large physical object for which publisher Crown paid Obama tens of millions of dollars and which Obama spent four years writing (without a ghost, he brags).

No, I’m talking about Barack Obama Book, a 61-page tome by an author named “University Press.” Why is Barack Obama Book selling so well? Thanks to sponsored listings and canny search engine optimization, the book appears above Barack Obama’s actual memoir if you search Amazon for—you guessed it—“barack obama book.” Read More

#fake, #news-summarization, #nlp

Zero-shot Learning for Relation Extraction

Most existing supervised and few-shot learning relation extraction methods have relied on labeled training data. However, in real-world scenarios, there exist many relations for which there is no available training data. We address this issue from the perspective of zero-shot learning (ZSL) which is similar to the way humans learn and recognize new concepts with no prior knowledge. We propose a zero-shot learning relation extraction (ZSLRE) framework, which focuses on recognizing novel relations that have no corresponding labeled data available for training. Our proposed ZSLRE model aims to recognize new relations based on prototypical networks that are modified to utilize side (auxiliary) information. The additional use of side information allows those modified prototype networks to recognize novel relations in addition to recognized previously known relations. We construct side information from labels and their synonyms, hypernyms of name entities, and keywords. We build an automatic hypernym extraction framework to help get hypernyms of various name entities directly from web. We demonstrate using extensive experiments on two public datasets (NYT and FewRel)that our proposed model significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods on supervised learning, few-shot learning and zero-shot learning tasks. Our experimental results also demonstrate the effectiveness and robustness of our proposed model in a combination scenario. Once accepted for publication, we will publish ZSLRE’s source code and datasets to enable reproducibility and encourage further research. Read More

#performance

An Introduction to Federated Learning

Federated (de-centralized) learning (FL) is an approach that downloads the current model and computes an updated model at the device itself using local data, rather than going to one pool to update the device. These locally trained models are then sent from the devices back to the central server where they are aggregated and then a single consolidated and improved global model is sent back to the devices. Federated learning makes it possible for AI algorithms to gain experience from a vast range of data located at different sites. Read More

#federated-learning

Citizens are turning face recognition on unidentified police

In part one of an audio series on face recognition, we explore the unexpected ways the technology is being used.

The new series of our AI podcast, In Machines We Trust, is all about face recognition. In part one of the series, Jennifer Strong and the team at MIT Technology Review explore the unexpected ways the technology is being used, including how it is being turned on police. Read More

#podcasts, #surveillance

The state of AI in 2020

The results of this year’s McKinsey Global Survey on artificial intelligence (AI) suggest that organizations are using AI as a tool for generating value. Increasingly, that value is coming in the form of revenues. A small contingent of respondents coming from a variety of industries attribute 20 percent or more of their organizations’ earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) to AI. These companies plan to invest even more in AI in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and its acceleration of all things digital. This could create a wider divide between AI leaders and the majority of companies still struggling to capitalize on the technology; however, these leaders engage in a number of practices that could offer helpful hints for success. And while companies overall are making some progress in mitigating the risks of AI, most still have a long way to go. Read More

#strategy

What is AI? We made this to help.

We made an podcast game to help you determine what is, or isn’t, AI

Defining what is, or isn’t artificial intelligence can be tricky (or tough). So much so, even the experts get it wrong sometimes. That’s why MIT Technology Review’s Senior AI Reporter Karen Hao created a flowchart to explain it all. In this bonus content our Host Jennifer Strong and her team reimagine Hao’s reporting, gamifying it into an audio postcard of sorts.  Read More

#artificial-intelligence, #podcasts

Nvidia developed a radically different way to compress video calls

Nvidia Maxine uses Generative Adversarial Networks to re-create video frames.

Last month, Nvidia announced a new platform called Maxine that uses AI to enhance the performance and functionality of video conferencing software. The software uses a neural network to create a compact representation of a person’s face. This compact representation can then be sent across the network, where a second neural network reconstructs the original image—possibly with helpful modifications.

Nvidia says that its technique can reduce the bandwidth needs of video conferencing software by a factor of 10 compared to conventional compression techniques. It can also change how a person’s face is displayed. For example, if someone appears to be facing off-center due to the position of her camera, the software can rotate her face to look straight instead. Software can also replace someone’s real face with an animated avatar. Read More

#nvidia