The processes of ICT diffusion in technology projects
- Jagodic, Jana, Courvisanos, Jerry, Yearwood, John
- Authors: Jagodic, Jana , Courvisanos, Jerry , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Innovation: Management Policy & Practice Vol. 11, no. 3 (2009), p. 291-303
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Delivering technology projects on time with a specified budget and resources has emerged as a strategic imperative in the highly competitive business world. One of the project challenges is increasingly tied to diffigion (spread) of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) innovation. This paper presents an empirical study that examines how ICT innovation is diffused within technology projects. Based on the case study methodology within 12 organisations in Australia and Germany, it emerged that ICT innovation is diffused formally alongside standard project management phases and informally within informal networks. The findings are synthesised in a new framework that seeks to inform theory and practice about formal and informal processes of ICT diffusion in technology projects.
- Description: 2003007370
- Authors: Jagodic, Jana , Courvisanos, Jerry , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Innovation: Management Policy & Practice Vol. 11, no. 3 (2009), p. 291-303
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Delivering technology projects on time with a specified budget and resources has emerged as a strategic imperative in the highly competitive business world. One of the project challenges is increasingly tied to diffigion (spread) of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) innovation. This paper presents an empirical study that examines how ICT innovation is diffused within technology projects. Based on the case study methodology within 12 organisations in Australia and Germany, it emerged that ICT innovation is diffused formally alongside standard project management phases and informally within informal networks. The findings are synthesised in a new framework that seeks to inform theory and practice about formal and informal processes of ICT diffusion in technology projects.
- Description: 2003007370
A new scoring system in Cystic Fibrosis : Statistical tools for database analysis - A preliminary report
- Hafen, Gaudenz, Hurst, Cameron, Yearwood, John, Smith, Julie, Dzalilov, Zari, Robinson, P. J.
- Authors: Hafen, Gaudenz , Hurst, Cameron , Yearwood, John , Smith, Julie , Dzalilov, Zari , Robinson, P. J.
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making Vol. 8, no. 44 (2008), p.1-11
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Background. Cystic fibrosis is the most common fatal genetic disorder in the Caucasian population. Scoring systems for assessment of Cystic fibrosis disease severity have been used for almost 50 years, without being adapted to the milder phenotype of the disease in the 21st century. The aim of this current project is to develop a new scoring system using a database and employing various statistical tools. This study protocol reports the development of the statistical tools in order to create such a scoring system. Methods. The evaluation is based on the Cystic Fibrosis database from the cohort at the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne. Initially, unsupervised clustering of the all data records was performed using a range of clustering algorithms. In particular incremental clustering algorithms were used. The clusters obtained were characterised using rules from decision trees and the results examined by clinicians. In order to obtain a clearer definition of classes expert opinion of each individual's clinical severity was sought. After data preparation including expert-opinion of an individual's clinical severity on a 3 point-scale (mild, moderate and severe disease), two multivariate techniques were used throughout the analysis to establish a method that would have a better success in feature selection and model derivation: 'Canonical Analysis of Principal Coordinates' and 'Linear Discriminant Analysis'. A 3-step procedure was performed with (1) selection of features, (2) extracting 5 severity classes out of a 3 severity class as defined per expert-opinion and (3) establishment of calibration datasets. Results. (1) Feature selection: CAP has a more effective "modelling" focus than DA. (2) Extraction of 5 severity classes: after variables were identified as important in discriminating contiguous CF severity groups on the 3-point scale as mild/moderate and moderate/severe, Discriminant Function (DF) was used to determine the new groups mild, intermediate moderate, moderate, intermediate severe and severe disease. (3) Generated confusion tables showed a misclassification rate of 19.1% for males and 16.5% for females, with a majority of misallocations into adjacent severity classes particularly for males. Conclusion. Our preliminary data show that using CAP for detection of selection features and Linear DA to derive the actual model in a CF database might be helpful in developing a scoring system. However, there are several limitations, particularly more data entry points are needed to finalize a score and the statistical tools have further to be refined and validated, with re-running the statistical methods in the larger dataset. © 2008 Hafen et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
- Authors: Hafen, Gaudenz , Hurst, Cameron , Yearwood, John , Smith, Julie , Dzalilov, Zari , Robinson, P. J.
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making Vol. 8, no. 44 (2008), p.1-11
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Background. Cystic fibrosis is the most common fatal genetic disorder in the Caucasian population. Scoring systems for assessment of Cystic fibrosis disease severity have been used for almost 50 years, without being adapted to the milder phenotype of the disease in the 21st century. The aim of this current project is to develop a new scoring system using a database and employing various statistical tools. This study protocol reports the development of the statistical tools in order to create such a scoring system. Methods. The evaluation is based on the Cystic Fibrosis database from the cohort at the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne. Initially, unsupervised clustering of the all data records was performed using a range of clustering algorithms. In particular incremental clustering algorithms were used. The clusters obtained were characterised using rules from decision trees and the results examined by clinicians. In order to obtain a clearer definition of classes expert opinion of each individual's clinical severity was sought. After data preparation including expert-opinion of an individual's clinical severity on a 3 point-scale (mild, moderate and severe disease), two multivariate techniques were used throughout the analysis to establish a method that would have a better success in feature selection and model derivation: 'Canonical Analysis of Principal Coordinates' and 'Linear Discriminant Analysis'. A 3-step procedure was performed with (1) selection of features, (2) extracting 5 severity classes out of a 3 severity class as defined per expert-opinion and (3) establishment of calibration datasets. Results. (1) Feature selection: CAP has a more effective "modelling" focus than DA. (2) Extraction of 5 severity classes: after variables were identified as important in discriminating contiguous CF severity groups on the 3-point scale as mild/moderate and moderate/severe, Discriminant Function (DF) was used to determine the new groups mild, intermediate moderate, moderate, intermediate severe and severe disease. (3) Generated confusion tables showed a misclassification rate of 19.1% for males and 16.5% for females, with a majority of misallocations into adjacent severity classes particularly for males. Conclusion. Our preliminary data show that using CAP for detection of selection features and Linear DA to derive the actual model in a CF database might be helpful in developing a scoring system. However, there are several limitations, particularly more data entry points are needed to finalize a score and the statistical tools have further to be refined and validated, with re-running the statistical methods in the larger dataset. © 2008 Hafen et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
A web-based Narrative construction environment
- Yearwood, John, Stranieri, Andrew, Osman, Deanna
- Authors: Yearwood, John , Stranieri, Andrew , Osman, Deanna
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at NILE 2008: 5th International Conference on Narrative and Interactive Learning Environments, Edinburgh, Scotland : 6th-8th August 2008 p. 78-81
- Full Text:
- Description: This paper describes a web-based environment for constructing narrative from story snippets contributed by a community of interest. The underlying model uses an argument based structure to infer the next event in the narrative sequence. The approach makes use of both events and higher level story elements derived from Polti’s dramatic situations. Dramatic situations used are consistent with a theme, and events are generally constrained by the dramatic situation. The narrative generated is a function of the event history, the dramatic situations chosen and the plausible inferences about next events that are contributed by a community of interest in the theme. At this stage, a player’s actions are simulated using a random selection from a set and the implementation of a nonsense filter. Example outputs from the system are provided and discussed.
- Description: 2003006499
- Authors: Yearwood, John , Stranieri, Andrew , Osman, Deanna
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at NILE 2008: 5th International Conference on Narrative and Interactive Learning Environments, Edinburgh, Scotland : 6th-8th August 2008 p. 78-81
- Full Text:
- Description: This paper describes a web-based environment for constructing narrative from story snippets contributed by a community of interest. The underlying model uses an argument based structure to infer the next event in the narrative sequence. The approach makes use of both events and higher level story elements derived from Polti’s dramatic situations. Dramatic situations used are consistent with a theme, and events are generally constrained by the dramatic situation. The narrative generated is a function of the event history, the dramatic situations chosen and the plausible inferences about next events that are contributed by a community of interest in the theme. At this stage, a player’s actions are simulated using a random selection from a set and the implementation of a nonsense filter. Example outputs from the system are provided and discussed.
- Description: 2003006499
AWSum - applying data mining in a health care scenario
- Quinn, Anthony, Jelinek, Herbert, Stranieri, Andrew, Yearwood, John
- Authors: Quinn, Anthony , Jelinek, Herbert , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at International Conference on Intelligent Sensors, Sensor Networks and Information Processing, ISSNIP 2008, Sydney, New South Wales : 15th-18th December 2008 p. 291-296
- Full Text:
- Description: This paper investigates the application of a new data mining algorithm called Automated Weighted Sum, (AWSum), to diabetes screening data to explore its use in providing researchers with new insight into the disease and secondarily to explore the potential the algorithm has for the generation of prognostic models for clinical use. There are many data mining classifiers that produce high levels of predictive accuracy but their application to health research and clinical applications is limited because they are complex, produce results that are difficult to interpret and are difficult to integrate with current knowledge and practises. This is because most focus on accuracy at the expense of informing the user as to the influences that lead to their classification results. By providing this information on influences a researcher can be pointed to new potentially interesting avenues for investigation. AWSum measures influence by calculating a weight for each feature value that represents its influence on a class value relative to other class values. The results produced, although on limited data, indicated the approach has potential uses for research and has some characteristics that may be useful in the future development of prognostic models.
- Description: 2003006660
- Authors: Quinn, Anthony , Jelinek, Herbert , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at International Conference on Intelligent Sensors, Sensor Networks and Information Processing, ISSNIP 2008, Sydney, New South Wales : 15th-18th December 2008 p. 291-296
- Full Text:
- Description: This paper investigates the application of a new data mining algorithm called Automated Weighted Sum, (AWSum), to diabetes screening data to explore its use in providing researchers with new insight into the disease and secondarily to explore the potential the algorithm has for the generation of prognostic models for clinical use. There are many data mining classifiers that produce high levels of predictive accuracy but their application to health research and clinical applications is limited because they are complex, produce results that are difficult to interpret and are difficult to integrate with current knowledge and practises. This is because most focus on accuracy at the expense of informing the user as to the influences that lead to their classification results. By providing this information on influences a researcher can be pointed to new potentially interesting avenues for investigation. AWSum measures influence by calculating a weight for each feature value that represents its influence on a class value relative to other class values. The results produced, although on limited data, indicated the approach has potential uses for research and has some characteristics that may be useful in the future development of prognostic models.
- Description: 2003006660
Dramatic level analysis for interactive narrative
- Macfadyen, Alyx, Stranieri, Andrew, Yearwood, John
- Authors: Macfadyen, Alyx , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at NILE 2008: 5th International Conference on Narrative and Interactive Learning Environments, Edinburgh, Scotland : 6th-8th August 2008 p. 17-22
- Full Text:
- Description: In interactive 3D narratives, a user’s narrative emerges through interactions with the system and embodied agencies (characters) mediated through the 3D environment. We present a methodology that identifies and measures four factors in interactive narrative where agency is present. We describe a technique for measuring drama, agency and engagement and compare the centrality of a designed interactive narrative with the emergent participatory narrative. This methodology has application as an analytic device for any interactive narrative where agency is fundamental. The adoption of the FrameNet semantic resource and the interpretation of interaction in narrative, situate this work in the domain of 3D interactive narratives, mixed and augmented realities and polymorphic narratives that cross forms of media.
- Description: 2003006540
- Authors: Macfadyen, Alyx , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at NILE 2008: 5th International Conference on Narrative and Interactive Learning Environments, Edinburgh, Scotland : 6th-8th August 2008 p. 17-22
- Full Text:
- Description: In interactive 3D narratives, a user’s narrative emerges through interactions with the system and embodied agencies (characters) mediated through the 3D environment. We present a methodology that identifies and measures four factors in interactive narrative where agency is present. We describe a technique for measuring drama, agency and engagement and compare the centrality of a designed interactive narrative with the emergent participatory narrative. This methodology has application as an analytic device for any interactive narrative where agency is fundamental. The adoption of the FrameNet semantic resource and the interpretation of interaction in narrative, situate this work in the domain of 3D interactive narratives, mixed and augmented realities and polymorphic narratives that cross forms of media.
- Description: 2003006540
New traceability codes and identification algorithm for tracing pirates
- Wu, Xinwen, Watters, Paul, Yearwood, John
- Authors: Wu, Xinwen , Watters, Paul , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 2008 International Symposium on Parallel and Distributed Processing with Applications, ISPA 2008, Sydney, New South Wales : 10th-12th December 2008 p. 719-724
- Full Text:
- Description: With the increasing popularity of digital products, there is a strong desire to protect the rights of owners against illegal redistribution. Traditional encryption schemes alone do not provide a comprehensive solution to digital rights management, since they do not prevent users who are authorized to use a digital product for their own use from transferring the cleartext content to unauthorized users. However, traceability schemes can be used to trace the illegitimate redistributors effectively. Two types of traceability schemes have been proposed in the literature - traceability codes (TA codes), and codes with the identifiable parent properties (IPP codes). TA codes are special IPP codes, and many TA codes implement an efficient identification algorithm which can determine at least one redistributor. However, many IPP codes are not TA codes, in which case, no efficient identification algorithms are available. In this paper, we generalize the definition of TA codes to derive a new family of traceability codes that is much larger than the family of traditional TA codes. By using existing decoding algorithms with respect to the Lee distance, an efficient identification algorithm is proposed for generalized TA codes. Furthermore, we show that the identification algorithm of generalized TA codes can find more redistributors than those of traditional TA codes.
- Description: 2003006288
- Authors: Wu, Xinwen , Watters, Paul , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 2008 International Symposium on Parallel and Distributed Processing with Applications, ISPA 2008, Sydney, New South Wales : 10th-12th December 2008 p. 719-724
- Full Text:
- Description: With the increasing popularity of digital products, there is a strong desire to protect the rights of owners against illegal redistribution. Traditional encryption schemes alone do not provide a comprehensive solution to digital rights management, since they do not prevent users who are authorized to use a digital product for their own use from transferring the cleartext content to unauthorized users. However, traceability schemes can be used to trace the illegitimate redistributors effectively. Two types of traceability schemes have been proposed in the literature - traceability codes (TA codes), and codes with the identifiable parent properties (IPP codes). TA codes are special IPP codes, and many TA codes implement an efficient identification algorithm which can determine at least one redistributor. However, many IPP codes are not TA codes, in which case, no efficient identification algorithms are available. In this paper, we generalize the definition of TA codes to derive a new family of traceability codes that is much larger than the family of traditional TA codes. By using existing decoding algorithms with respect to the Lee distance, an efficient identification algorithm is proposed for generalized TA codes. Furthermore, we show that the identification algorithm of generalized TA codes can find more redistributors than those of traditional TA codes.
- Description: 2003006288
Toward computer mediated elicitation of a community's core values for sustainable decision making
- Stranieri, Andrew, Yearwood, John, Afshar, Faye
- Authors: Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John , Afshar, Faye
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 11th Annual Australian Conference on Knowledge Management and Intelligent Decision Support ACKMIDS 2008 p. 1-14
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Authors: Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John , Afshar, Faye
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 11th Annual Australian Conference on Knowledge Management and Intelligent Decision Support ACKMIDS 2008 p. 1-14
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
Weblogs for market research : Improving opinion detection using system fusion
- Osman, Deanna, Yearwood, John, Vamplew, Peter
- Authors: Osman, Deanna , Yearwood, John , Vamplew, Peter
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at International Conference on Service Systems and Service Management, 2008, Melbourne, Victoria : 30th June - 2nd July 2008 p. 1-6
- Full Text:
- Description: Searching for opinions on a specific product or service within blogs is a new frontier for market researchers. This research investigates the use of system fusion methods to improve mean average precision (MAP) results achieved by the Text REtrieval Conference (TREC) Blog06 participants and reports the improved MAP results. It is hypothesized that diversity of the inputs is vital to maximising the MAP improvements. This is shown in the improvement in MAP values achieved by some of the participantpsilas ranked lists. The growth in the number of blog authors who write valuable opinions about their life experiences has led to an unsolicited resource of opinions on products, politics and services. In 2006, TREC collected blogs and set a task of detecting opinions on given topics to their participants, reporting the results using MAP.
- Description: 2003007757
- Authors: Osman, Deanna , Yearwood, John , Vamplew, Peter
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at International Conference on Service Systems and Service Management, 2008, Melbourne, Victoria : 30th June - 2nd July 2008 p. 1-6
- Full Text:
- Description: Searching for opinions on a specific product or service within blogs is a new frontier for market researchers. This research investigates the use of system fusion methods to improve mean average precision (MAP) results achieved by the Text REtrieval Conference (TREC) Blog06 participants and reports the improved MAP results. It is hypothesized that diversity of the inputs is vital to maximising the MAP improvements. This is shown in the improvement in MAP values achieved by some of the participantpsilas ranked lists. The growth in the number of blog authors who write valuable opinions about their life experiences has led to an unsolicited resource of opinions on products, politics and services. In 2006, TREC collected blogs and set a task of detecting opinions on given topics to their participants, reporting the results using MAP.
- Description: 2003007757
A fully automated CAD system using multi-category feature selection with restricted recombination
- Ghosh, Ranadhir, Ghosh, Moumita, Yearwood, John, Mukherjee, Subhasis
- Authors: Ghosh, Ranadhir , Ghosh, Moumita , Yearwood, John , Mukherjee, Subhasis
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 6th IEEE/ACIS International Conference on Computer and Information Science, ICIS 2007, Melbourne, Victoria : 11th-13th July 2007 p. 106-111
- Full Text:
- Description: In pattern recognition problems features plays an important role for classification results. It is very important which features are used and how many features are used for the classification process. Most of the real life classification problem uses different category of features. It is desirable to find the optimal combination of features that improves the performance of the classifier. There exists different selection framework that selects the features. Mostly do not incorporate the impact of one category of features on another. Even if they incorporate, they produce conflict between the categories. In this paper we proposed a restricted crossover selection framework which incorporate the impact of different categories on each other, as well as it restricts the search within the category which searching in the global region of the search space. The results obtained by the proposed framework are promising.
- Description: 2003005429
- Authors: Ghosh, Ranadhir , Ghosh, Moumita , Yearwood, John , Mukherjee, Subhasis
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 6th IEEE/ACIS International Conference on Computer and Information Science, ICIS 2007, Melbourne, Victoria : 11th-13th July 2007 p. 106-111
- Full Text:
- Description: In pattern recognition problems features plays an important role for classification results. It is very important which features are used and how many features are used for the classification process. Most of the real life classification problem uses different category of features. It is desirable to find the optimal combination of features that improves the performance of the classifier. There exists different selection framework that selects the features. Mostly do not incorporate the impact of one category of features on another. Even if they incorporate, they produce conflict between the categories. In this paper we proposed a restricted crossover selection framework which incorporate the impact of different categories on each other, as well as it restricts the search within the category which searching in the global region of the search space. The results obtained by the proposed framework are promising.
- Description: 2003005429
Classification for accuracy and insight : A weighted sum approach
- Quinn, Anthony, Stranieri, Andrew, Yearwood, John
- Authors: Quinn, Anthony , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Sixth Australasian Data Mining Conference, AusDM 2007, Gold Coast, Queensland, Victoria : 3rd-4th December 2007 p. 203-208
- Full Text:
- Description: This research presents a classifier that aims to provide insight into a dataset in addition to achieving classification accuracies comparable to other algorithms. The classifier called, Automated Weighted Sum (AWSum) uses a weighted sum approach where feature values are assigned weights that are summed and compared to a threshold in order to classify an example. Though naive, this approach is scalable, achieves accurate classifications on standard datasets and also provides a degree of insight. By insight we mean that the technique provides an appreciation of the influence a feature value has on class values, relative to each other. AWSum provides a focus on the feature value space that allows the technique to identify feature values and combinations of feature values that are sensitive and important for a classification. This is particularly useful in fields such as medicine where this sort of micro-focus and understanding is critical in classification.
- Description: 2003005504
- Authors: Quinn, Anthony , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Sixth Australasian Data Mining Conference, AusDM 2007, Gold Coast, Queensland, Victoria : 3rd-4th December 2007 p. 203-208
- Full Text:
- Description: This research presents a classifier that aims to provide insight into a dataset in addition to achieving classification accuracies comparable to other algorithms. The classifier called, Automated Weighted Sum (AWSum) uses a weighted sum approach where feature values are assigned weights that are summed and compared to a threshold in order to classify an example. Though naive, this approach is scalable, achieves accurate classifications on standard datasets and also provides a degree of insight. By insight we mean that the technique provides an appreciation of the influence a feature value has on class values, relative to each other. AWSum provides a focus on the feature value space that allows the technique to identify feature values and combinations of feature values that are sensitive and important for a classification. This is particularly useful in fields such as medicine where this sort of micro-focus and understanding is critical in classification.
- Description: 2003005504
Dramatic flow in interactive 3D narrative
- Macfadyen, Alyx, Stranieri, Andrew, Yearwood, John
- Authors: Macfadyen, Alyx , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Fourth Australiasian Conference on Interactive Entertainment, IE2007, RMIT University, Melbourne, Victoria : 3rd-5th December 2007
- Full Text:
- Description: The concept of dramatic level is crucial for a model of dramatic flow. We present a framework to maintain optimal dramatic flow in an interactive 3D environment where both linear and emergent narratives co-exist. Unlike all other interactive narrative prototypes the framework advanced focuses on the optimal dramatic flow of the emerging user narrative so that although fragmented, it can be engaging and make sense. Using a sample narrative from Ovid’s Metamorphoses [18] we demonstrate a method to evaluate dramatic levels as plot points so that movement across narratives retains a strong dramatic flow. Although users may never choose to explore any given linear narrative in its entirety, the result is an engaging and rich narrative experience.
- Description: 2003004706
- Authors: Macfadyen, Alyx , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Fourth Australiasian Conference on Interactive Entertainment, IE2007, RMIT University, Melbourne, Victoria : 3rd-5th December 2007
- Full Text:
- Description: The concept of dramatic level is crucial for a model of dramatic flow. We present a framework to maintain optimal dramatic flow in an interactive 3D environment where both linear and emergent narratives co-exist. Unlike all other interactive narrative prototypes the framework advanced focuses on the optimal dramatic flow of the emerging user narrative so that although fragmented, it can be engaging and make sense. Using a sample narrative from Ovid’s Metamorphoses [18] we demonstrate a method to evaluate dramatic levels as plot points so that movement across narratives retains a strong dramatic flow. Although users may never choose to explore any given linear narrative in its entirety, the result is an engaging and rich narrative experience.
- Description: 2003004706
Narrative-based interactive learning environments from modelling reasoning
- Yearwood, John, Stranieri, Andrew
- Authors: Yearwood, John , Stranieri, Andrew
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Educational Technology and Society Vol. 10, no. 3 (2007), p. 192-208
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Narrative and story telling has a long history of use in structuring, organising and communicating human experience. This paper describes a narrative based interactive intelligent learning environment which aims to elucidate practical reasoning using interactive emergent narratives that can be used in training novices in decision making. Its design is based on an approach to generating narrative from knowledge that has been modelled in specific decision/reasoning domains. The approach uses a narrative model that is guided partially by inference and contextual information contained in the particular knowledge representation used, the Generic/Actual argument model of structured reasoning. The approach is described with examples in the area of critical care nursing training and positive learning outcomes are reported. © International Forum of Educational Technology & Society (IFETS).
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003002522
- Authors: Yearwood, John , Stranieri, Andrew
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Educational Technology and Society Vol. 10, no. 3 (2007), p. 192-208
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Narrative and story telling has a long history of use in structuring, organising and communicating human experience. This paper describes a narrative based interactive intelligent learning environment which aims to elucidate practical reasoning using interactive emergent narratives that can be used in training novices in decision making. Its design is based on an approach to generating narrative from knowledge that has been modelled in specific decision/reasoning domains. The approach uses a narrative model that is guided partially by inference and contextual information contained in the particular knowledge representation used, the Generic/Actual argument model of structured reasoning. The approach is described with examples in the area of critical care nursing training and positive learning outcomes are reported. © International Forum of Educational Technology & Society (IFETS).
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003002522
Opinion search in web logs
- Osman, Deanna, Yearwood, John
- Authors: Osman, Deanna , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Eighteenth Australasian Database Conference, ADC 2007, Ballarat, Victoria : 29th January-2nd February 2007 p. 133-139
- Full Text:
- Description: Web logs(blogs) are a fast growing forum for people of all ages to express their feelings and opinions on topics of interest. The entries are often written in informal language without the structure found in newswire or published articles. One blog entry may contain many topics, these topics may express an opinion or a fact on a particular topic. This research is in contrast to work on opinion detection which has been carried out on more formally authored texts and on segments that are either whole documents or sentences. Whole web logs are divided into topics using a simple text segmentation approach. Similarity scores are used to distinguish where topic changers occur. The results are compared to human-evaluated topic changes and the most accurate algorithm is used in the remainder of the research. Words within each topic-block are allocated weightings depending on their opinion-bearing strength. Two approaches of using these weights, the sum and the maximum, are used to determine whether the topic-block is opinion-bearing or non-opinion-bearing. The opinion-bearing topic-blocks are rated by human evaluators as either opinion-bearing or non-opinion-bearing with precision of 67% for approach A and 70% for approach B. These results are compared with two approaches on published text to identify the difference between web logs and published articles.
- Description: 2003004895
- Authors: Osman, Deanna , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Eighteenth Australasian Database Conference, ADC 2007, Ballarat, Victoria : 29th January-2nd February 2007 p. 133-139
- Full Text:
- Description: Web logs(blogs) are a fast growing forum for people of all ages to express their feelings and opinions on topics of interest. The entries are often written in informal language without the structure found in newswire or published articles. One blog entry may contain many topics, these topics may express an opinion or a fact on a particular topic. This research is in contrast to work on opinion detection which has been carried out on more formally authored texts and on segments that are either whole documents or sentences. Whole web logs are divided into topics using a simple text segmentation approach. Similarity scores are used to distinguish where topic changers occur. The results are compared to human-evaluated topic changes and the most accurate algorithm is used in the remainder of the research. Words within each topic-block are allocated weightings depending on their opinion-bearing strength. Two approaches of using these weights, the sum and the maximum, are used to determine whether the topic-block is opinion-bearing or non-opinion-bearing. The opinion-bearing topic-blocks are rated by human evaluators as either opinion-bearing or non-opinion-bearing with precision of 67% for approach A and 70% for approach B. These results are compared with two approaches on published text to identify the difference between web logs and published articles.
- Description: 2003004895
Two-step comprehensive open domain text annotation with frame semantics
- Ofoghi, Bahadorreza, Yearwood, John, Ma, Liping
- Authors: Ofoghi, Bahadorreza , Yearwood, John , Ma, Liping
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Australasian Language Technology Workshop 2007, Melbourne Zoo, Melbourne, Victoria : 10th-11th December 2007 p. 83-91
- Full Text:
- Description: With shallow semantic parsing tasks receiving more attention in many natural language applications, there is a need for labelled corpora for learning the specific tags under consideration. In this paper, we discuss a two-step semantic class and semantic role assignment based on the FrameNet elements over a subset of the AQUAINT collection with a reasonable coverage over the semantic frames in FrameNet. The quality of the annotation task is examined through inter-annotator agreement. The methodology described in this work for measuring inter-annotator agreement can be adapted for similar tasks. Some central aspects of the task are also detailed in this paper.
- Description: 2003005522
- Authors: Ofoghi, Bahadorreza , Yearwood, John , Ma, Liping
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Australasian Language Technology Workshop 2007, Melbourne Zoo, Melbourne, Victoria : 10th-11th December 2007 p. 83-91
- Full Text:
- Description: With shallow semantic parsing tasks receiving more attention in many natural language applications, there is a need for labelled corpora for learning the specific tags under consideration. In this paper, we discuss a two-step semantic class and semantic role assignment based on the FrameNet elements over a subset of the AQUAINT collection with a reasonable coverage over the semantic frames in FrameNet. The quality of the annotation task is examined through inter-annotator agreement. The methodology described in this work for measuring inter-annotator agreement can be adapted for similar tasks. Some central aspects of the task are also detailed in this paper.
- Description: 2003005522
Using corpus analysis to inform research into opinion detection in blogs
- Osman, Deanna, Yearwood, John, Vamplew, Peter
- Authors: Osman, Deanna , Yearwood, John , Vamplew, Peter
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Sixth Australasian Data Mining Conference, AusDM 2007, Gold Coast, Queensland, Victoria : 3rd-4th December 2007 p. 65-75
- Full Text:
- Description: Opinion detection research relies on labeled documents for training data, either by assumptions based on the document's origin or by using human assessors to categorise the documents. In recent years, blogs have become a source for opinion identification research (TREC Blog06). This study analyses the part-of-speech proportion and the words used within various corpora, determining key differences and similarities useful when preparing for opinion identification research. The resulting comparisons between the characteristics of the various corpora is detailed and discussed. In particular, opinion bearing and non opinion Blog06 documents were found to display a high level of similarity, indicating that blog documents assessed at the document level cannot be used as training data in opinion identification research.
- Description: 2003004892
- Authors: Osman, Deanna , Yearwood, John , Vamplew, Peter
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Sixth Australasian Data Mining Conference, AusDM 2007, Gold Coast, Queensland, Victoria : 3rd-4th December 2007 p. 65-75
- Full Text:
- Description: Opinion detection research relies on labeled documents for training data, either by assumptions based on the document's origin or by using human assessors to categorise the documents. In recent years, blogs have become a source for opinion identification research (TREC Blog06). This study analyses the part-of-speech proportion and the words used within various corpora, determining key differences and similarities useful when preparing for opinion identification research. The resulting comparisons between the characteristics of the various corpora is detailed and discussed. In particular, opinion bearing and non opinion Blog06 documents were found to display a high level of similarity, indicating that blog documents assessed at the document level cannot be used as training data in opinion identification research.
- Description: 2003004892
Using links to aid web classification
- Xie, Wei, Mammadov, Musa, Yearwood, John
- Authors: Xie, Wei , Mammadov, Musa , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 6th IEEE/ACIS International Conference on Computer and Information Science, ICIS 2007, Melbourne, Victoria : 11th-13th July 2007 p. 981-986
- Full Text:
- Description: In this paper, we will present a new approach of using link information to improve the accuracy and efficiency of web classification. However, different from others, we only use the mappings between linked documents and their own class or classes. In this case, we only need to add a few features called linked-class features into the datasets. We apply SVM and BoosTexter for classification. We show that the classification accuracy can be improved based on mixtures of ordinary word features and out-linked-class features. We analyze and discuss the reason of this improvement.
- Description: 2003005438
- Authors: Xie, Wei , Mammadov, Musa , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 6th IEEE/ACIS International Conference on Computer and Information Science, ICIS 2007, Melbourne, Victoria : 11th-13th July 2007 p. 981-986
- Full Text:
- Description: In this paper, we will present a new approach of using link information to improve the accuracy and efficiency of web classification. However, different from others, we only use the mappings between linked documents and their own class or classes. In this case, we only need to add a few features called linked-class features into the datasets. We apply SVM and BoosTexter for classification. We show that the classification accuracy can be improved based on mixtures of ordinary word features and out-linked-class features. We analyze and discuss the reason of this improvement.
- Description: 2003005438
Visual tools for analysing evolution, emergence, and error in data streams
- Hart, Sol, Yearwood, John, Bagirov, Adil
- Authors: Hart, Sol , Yearwood, John , Bagirov, Adil
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 6th IEEE/ACIS International Conference on Computer and Information Science, ICIS 2007, Melbourne, Victoria : 11th-13th July 2007 p. 987-992
- Full Text:
- Description: The relatively new field of stream mining has necessitated the development of robust drift-aware algorithms that provide accurate, real time, data handling capabilities. Tools are needed to assess and diagnose important trends and investigate drift evolution parameters. In this paper, we present two new and novel visualisation techniques, Pixie and Luna graphs, which incorporate salient group statistics coupled with intuitive visual representations of multidimensional groupings over time. Through the novel representations presented here, spatial interactions between temporal divisions can be diagnosed and overall distribution patterns identified. It provides a means of evaluating in non-constrained capacity, commonly constrained evolutionary problems.
- Description: 2003005432
- Authors: Hart, Sol , Yearwood, John , Bagirov, Adil
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at 6th IEEE/ACIS International Conference on Computer and Information Science, ICIS 2007, Melbourne, Victoria : 11th-13th July 2007 p. 987-992
- Full Text:
- Description: The relatively new field of stream mining has necessitated the development of robust drift-aware algorithms that provide accurate, real time, data handling capabilities. Tools are needed to assess and diagnose important trends and investigate drift evolution parameters. In this paper, we present two new and novel visualisation techniques, Pixie and Luna graphs, which incorporate salient group statistics coupled with intuitive visual representations of multidimensional groupings over time. Through the novel representations presented here, spatial interactions between temporal divisions can be diagnosed and overall distribution patterns identified. It provides a means of evaluating in non-constrained capacity, commonly constrained evolutionary problems.
- Description: 2003005432
A semantic approach to boost passage retrieval effectiveness for question answering
- Ofoghi, Bahadorreza, Yearwood, John, Ghosh, Ranadhir
- Authors: Ofoghi, Bahadorreza , Yearwood, John , Ghosh, Ranadhir
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Computer Science 2006 Twenty-Ninth Australian Computer Science Conference, Hobart : 16th January, 2006 p. 95-101
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: In the current state of the rapid growth of information resources and the huge number of requests submitted by users to existing information retrieval systems; recently, Question Answering systems have attracted more attention to meet information needs providing users with more precise and focused retrieval units. As one of the most challenging and important processes of such systems is to retrieve the best related text excerpts with regard to the questions, we propose a novel approach to exploit not only the syntax of the natural language of the questions and texts, but also the semantics relayed beneath them via a semantic question rewriting and passage retrieval task. The semantic structure used to address the surface mismatch of the semantically related passages and queries is FrameNet which is a lexical resource for English constituted based on frame semantics. We have run our proposed approach on a subset of the TREC 2004 factoid questions to retrieve passages containing correct answers from the AQUAINT collection and we have obtained promising results.
- Description: E1
- Description: 2003001803
- Authors: Ofoghi, Bahadorreza , Yearwood, John , Ghosh, Ranadhir
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Computer Science 2006 Twenty-Ninth Australian Computer Science Conference, Hobart : 16th January, 2006 p. 95-101
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: In the current state of the rapid growth of information resources and the huge number of requests submitted by users to existing information retrieval systems; recently, Question Answering systems have attracted more attention to meet information needs providing users with more precise and focused retrieval units. As one of the most challenging and important processes of such systems is to retrieve the best related text excerpts with regard to the questions, we propose a novel approach to exploit not only the syntax of the natural language of the questions and texts, but also the semantics relayed beneath them via a semantic question rewriting and passage retrieval task. The semantic structure used to address the surface mismatch of the semantically related passages and queries is FrameNet which is a lexical resource for English constituted based on frame semantics. We have run our proposed approach on a subset of the TREC 2004 factoid questions to retrieve passages containing correct answers from the AQUAINT collection and we have obtained promising results.
- Description: E1
- Description: 2003001803
An interaction framework for scenario-based three dimensional environments
- Macfadyen, Alyx, Stranieri, Andrew, Yearwood, John
- Authors: Macfadyen, Alyx , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at IE 2006, the 3rd Australasian Conference on Interactive Entertainment, Perth : 4th December, 2006
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Although popular and engaging, three dimensional environments are rarely deployed to depict strong narratives involving complex characters engaged in reasoning. The design of three dimensional environments rich in narrative and character depth can be facilitated with a detailed representation of interactions between characters. However, the representation of interaction in current 3D development environments such as game engines is quite basic. This work advances a scheme for representing interactions that integrates a representation of semantics from linguistics called FrameNet with conceptualizations of drama and narrative by Georges Polti and Joseph Campbell. The resulting interaction frame facilitates the design of 3D environments by providing designers rich, yet standard elements that include spatial and temporal data, with which to represent complex interactions in 3D environments. This has application for the authoring of dynamically generated interactive narrative environments.
- Description: E1
- Description: 2003001839
- Authors: Macfadyen, Alyx , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at IE 2006, the 3rd Australasian Conference on Interactive Entertainment, Perth : 4th December, 2006
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Although popular and engaging, three dimensional environments are rarely deployed to depict strong narratives involving complex characters engaged in reasoning. The design of three dimensional environments rich in narrative and character depth can be facilitated with a detailed representation of interactions between characters. However, the representation of interaction in current 3D development environments such as game engines is quite basic. This work advances a scheme for representing interactions that integrates a representation of semantics from linguistics called FrameNet with conceptualizations of drama and narrative by Georges Polti and Joseph Campbell. The resulting interaction frame facilitates the design of 3D environments by providing designers rich, yet standard elements that include spatial and temporal data, with which to represent complex interactions in 3D environments. This has application for the authoring of dynamically generated interactive narrative environments.
- Description: E1
- Description: 2003001839
Using association and overlapping time window approach to detect drug reaction signals
- Ivkovic, Sasha, Saunders, Gary, Ghosh, Ranadhir, Yearwood, John
- Authors: Ivkovic, Sasha , Saunders, Gary , Ghosh, Ranadhir , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at CIMCA 2005 International Conference on Computational Intelligence for Modelling Control & Automation jointly with IAWTIC 2005 International Conference on Intelligent Agents, Web Technologies & Internet Commerce, Vienna, Austria : 28th November, 2005 p. 1045-1053
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: The problem with detecting adverse drug reactions (ADRs) from drugs is that they may not be obvious until long after they are widely prescribed. Part of the problem is these events are rare. This work describes an approach to signal detection of ADRs based on association rules (AR) in Australian drug safety data. This work was carried out using the Australian Adverse Drug Reactions Advisory Committee (ADRAC) database, which contains a hundred and thirty seven thousand records collected in 1972-2001 period. Many signal detection methods have been developed for drug safety data, most of which use a classical statistical approach. Some of these stratify the data using an ontology for reactions, but the application of drug ontologies to ADR signal detection methods has not been reported. We propose a novel approach for detecting various signal levels by using an overlapped windowing approach. The overlapping windows help to detect smooth transition of signal. We use association rules for measuring significant change over time for different hierarchical levels of drugs (using the Anatomical-Therapeutic-Chemical (ATC) system of drug classification ontology) and their reactions based on the System Organ Classes (SOC) ontology. Using association rules and their strength for different levels in the drug and reaction hierarchy, helps in the detection of signals at particular levels in higher order using a bottom up approach. The results of a preliminary investigation of ADRAC data using our method demonstrate that this approach could produce a powerful and robust ADR signal detection method.
- Description: E1
- Description: 2003001838
- Authors: Ivkovic, Sasha , Saunders, Gary , Ghosh, Ranadhir , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at CIMCA 2005 International Conference on Computational Intelligence for Modelling Control & Automation jointly with IAWTIC 2005 International Conference on Intelligent Agents, Web Technologies & Internet Commerce, Vienna, Austria : 28th November, 2005 p. 1045-1053
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: The problem with detecting adverse drug reactions (ADRs) from drugs is that they may not be obvious until long after they are widely prescribed. Part of the problem is these events are rare. This work describes an approach to signal detection of ADRs based on association rules (AR) in Australian drug safety data. This work was carried out using the Australian Adverse Drug Reactions Advisory Committee (ADRAC) database, which contains a hundred and thirty seven thousand records collected in 1972-2001 period. Many signal detection methods have been developed for drug safety data, most of which use a classical statistical approach. Some of these stratify the data using an ontology for reactions, but the application of drug ontologies to ADR signal detection methods has not been reported. We propose a novel approach for detecting various signal levels by using an overlapped windowing approach. The overlapping windows help to detect smooth transition of signal. We use association rules for measuring significant change over time for different hierarchical levels of drugs (using the Anatomical-Therapeutic-Chemical (ATC) system of drug classification ontology) and their reactions based on the System Organ Classes (SOC) ontology. Using association rules and their strength for different levels in the drug and reaction hierarchy, helps in the detection of signals at particular levels in higher order using a bottom up approach. The results of a preliminary investigation of ADRAC data using our method demonstrate that this approach could produce a powerful and robust ADR signal detection method.
- Description: E1
- Description: 2003001838