A web-based Narrative construction environment
- 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
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- 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
Discovering interesting association rules from legal databases
- Authors: Ivkovic, Sasha , Yearwood, John , Stranieri, Andrew
- Date: 2002
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Information & Communication Technology Law Vol. 11, no. 1 (2002), p. 35-47
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- Description: The Knowledge Discovery from Databases (KDD) technique called 'association rules' is applied to a large data set representing applicants for government-funded legal aid. Results indicate that KDD can be an invaluable tool for legal analysts. Association rules discovered identify associations between variables that are present in the data set though are not necessarily causal. Interesting rules can prompt analysts to formulate hypotheses for further investigation. The identification of interesting rules is typically performed using an objective measure of 'interesting' although this measure is often not sufficiently accurate to eliminate all uninteresting rules. In this article, a subjective measure of interestingness is adopted in conjunction with the objective measures. This leads to the ability to focus more accurately on those rules that surprise the analyst and are therefore more likely to be interesting. In general, KDD techniques have not been applied to law despite possible benefits because data is often stored in narrative form rather than in structured databases. However, the impending introduction of data warehouses that collect data from a number of organizations across a legal system presents invaluable opportunities for analysts using KDD.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003000037
Structured reasoning to support deliberative dialogue
- Authors: Macfadyen, Alyx , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2005
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence 3681: Knowledge-Based Intelligent Information and Engineering Systems, 9th International Conference, KES 2005, Melbourne, Australia, September 2005, Proceedings, Part 1 Vol. 1, no. (2005), p. 283-289
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- Description: Deliberative dialogue is a form of dialogue that involves participants advancing claims and, without power plays or posturing, deliberating on the claims of others until a consensus decision is reached. This paper describes a deliberative support system to facilitate and encourage participants to engage in a discussion deliberatively. A knowledge representation framework is deployed to generate a strong domain model of reasoning structure. The structure, coupled with a deliberative dialogue protocol results in a web based system that regulates a discussion to avoid combative, non-deliberative exchanges. The system has been designed for online dispute resolution between husband and wife in divorce proceedings involving property.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003001381
Tools for placing legal decision support systems on the world wide web
- Authors: Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John , Zeleznikow, John
- Date: 2001
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Eighth International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, ICAIL 2001, St. Louis, USA : 21st-25th May 2001
- Full Text: false
- Description: 2003003944
Group structured reasoning for coalescing group decisions
- Authors: Yearwood, John , Stranieri, Andrew
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Group Decision and Negotiation Vol. , no. (2009), p. 1-29
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- Description: In this paper we present the notion of structured reasoning through a model, called the Generic/Actual Argument Model (GAAM). The model which has been used as a computational representation for machine modelling of reasoning and for hybrid combinations of human and machine reasoning can be used as a coalescent framework for decision making. Whilst the notion of structuring reasoning is not new, structured reasoning is advanced as a technique where group consensus on reasoning structures at various levels can be used to facilitate the comprehension of complex reasoning particularly where there are multiple perspectives. For an issue, the approach provides a scaffolding structure for cognitive co-operation and a normative reasoning structure against which group participants can identify points of difference and points in common as well as the nature of the differences and similarities. Intra-group transparency characterized by the ability to recognise points in common and understand the nature of differences is important to the process of coalescing group decisions that carry maximum group support. © 2009 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
Argumentation structures that integrate dialectical and non-dialectical reasoning
- Authors: Stranieri, Andrew , Zeleznikow, John , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2001
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Knowledge Engineering Review Vol. 16, no. 4 (Dec 2001), p. 331-348
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- Description: Argumentation concepts have been applied to numerous knowledge engineering endeavours in recent years. For example, a variety of logics have been developed to represent argumentation in the context of a dialectical situation such as a dialogue. In contrast to the dialectical approach, argumentation has also been used to structure knowledge. This can be seen as a non-dialectical approach. The Toulmin argument structure has often been used to structure knowledge non-dialectically yet most studies that apply the Toulmin structure do not use the original structure but vary one or more components. Variations to the Toulmin structure can be understood as different ways to integrate a dialectical perspective with a non-dialectical one. Drawing the dialectical/non-dialectical distinction enables the specification of a framework called the generic actual argument model that is expressly non-dialectical. The framework enables the development of knowledge-based systems that integrate a variety of inference procedures, combine information retrieval with reasoning and facilitate automated document drafting. Furthermore, the non-dialectical framework provides the foundation for simple dialectical models. Systems based on our approach have been developed in family law, refugee law, determining eligibility for government legal aid, copyright law and e-tourism.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003002516
A formula for multiple classifiers in data mining based on Brandt semigroups
- Authors: Kelarev, Andrei , Yearwood, John , Mammadov, Musa
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Semigroup Forum Vol. 78, no. 2 (2009), p. 293-309
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- Description: A general approach to designing multiple classifiers represents them as a combination of several binary classifiers in order to enable correction of classification errors and increase reliability. This method is explained, for example, in Witten and Frank (Data Mining: Practical Machine Learning Tools and Techniques, 2005, Sect. 7.5). The aim of this paper is to investigate representations of this sort based on Brandt semigroups. We give a formula for the maximum number of errors of binary classifiers, which can be corrected by a multiple classifier of this type. Examples show that our formula does not carry over to larger classes of semigroups. © 2008 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.
Narrative-based interactive learning environments from modelling reasoning
- Authors: Yearwood, John , Stranieri, Andrew
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Educational Technology and Society Vol. 10, no. 3 (2007), p. 192-208
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- 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
Rees matrix constructions for clustering of data
- Authors: Kelarev, Andrei , Watters, Paul , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2009
- Type: Journal article
- Relation: Journal of the Australian Mathematical Society Vol. 87, no. 3 (2009), p. 377-393
- Relation: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP0211866
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- Description: This paper continues the investigation of semigroup constructions motivated by applications in data mining. We give a complete description of the error-correcting capabilities of a large family of clusterers based on Rees matrix semigroups well known in semigroup theory. This result strengthens and complements previous formulas recently obtained in the literature. Examples show that our theorems do not generalize to other classes of semigroups.
A hybrid evolutionary algorithm for multi category feature selection in breast cancer recognition
- Authors: Ghosh, Ranadhir , Ghosh, Moumita , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2004
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at the Second International Conference on Software Computing and Intelligent Systems, Yokahama, Japan : 21st - 22nd September, 2004
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: E1
- Description: 2003000869
Visual tools for analysing evolution, emergence, and error in data streams
- 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
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- 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
Cayley graphs as classifiers for data mining : The influence of asymmetries
- Authors: Kelarev, Andrei , Ryan, Joe , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Discrete Mathematics Vol. 309, no. 17 (2009), p. 5360-5369
- Relation: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP0211866
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- Description: The endomorphism monoids of graphs have been actively investigated. They are convenient tools expressing asymmetries of the graphs. One of the most important classes of graphs considered in this framework is that of Cayley graphs. Our paper proposes a new method of using Cayley graphs for classification of data. We give a survey of recent results devoted to the Cayley graphs also involving their endomorphism monoids. © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
The study of drug-reaction relationships using global optimization techniques
- Authors: Mammadov, Musa , Rubinov, Alex , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2007
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Optimization Methods and Software Vol. 22, no. 1 (2007), p. 99-126
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: In this paper we develop an optimization approach for the study of adverse drug reaction (ADR) problems. This approach is based on drug-reaction relationships represented in the form of a vector of weights, which can be defined as a solution to some global optimization problem. Although it can be used for solving many ADR problems, we concentrate on two of them here: the accurate identification of drugs that are responsible for reactions that have occurred, and drug-drug interactions. Based on drug-reaction relationships, we formulate these problems as an optimization problem. The approach is applied to cardiovascularn-type reactions from the Australian Adverse Drug Reaction Advisory Committee (ADRAC) database. Software based on this approach has been developed and could have beneficial use in prescribing.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003002217
Optimization of multiple classifiers in data mining based on string rewriting systems
- Authors: Dazeley, Richard , Kelarev, Andrei , Yearwood, John , Mammadov, Musa
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Asian-European Journal of Mathematics Vol. 2, no. 1 (2009), p. 41-56
- Relation: https://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP0211866
- Relation: https://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/LP0669752
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- Description: Optimization of multiple classifiers is an important problem in data mining. We introduce additional structure on the class sets of the classifiers using string rewriting systems with a convenient matrix representation. The aim of the present paper is to develop an efficient algorithm for the optimization of the number of errors of individual classifiers, which can be corrected by these multiple classifiers.
Two-step comprehensive open domain text annotation with frame semantics
- 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
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- 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
Weblogs for market research : Improving opinion detection using system fusion
- 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
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- 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
New algorithms for multi-class cancer diagnosis using tumor gene expression signatures
- Authors: Bagirov, Adil , Ferguson, Brent , Ivkovic, Sasha , Saunders, Gary , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2003
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Bioinformatics Vol. 19, no. 14 (2003), p. 1800-1807
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- Description: Motivation: The increasing use of DNA microarray-based tumor gene expression profiles for cancer diagnosis requires mathematical methods with high accuracy for solving clustering, feature selection and classification problems of gene expression data. Results: New algorithms are developed for solving clustering, feature selection and classification problems of gene expression data. The clustering algorithm is based on optimization techniques and allows the calculation of clusters step-by-step. This approach allows us to find as many clusters as a data set contains with respect to some tolerance. Feature selection is crucial for a gene expression database. Our feature selection algorithm is based on calculating overlaps of different genes. The database used, contains over 16 000 genes and this number is considerably reduced by feature selection. We propose a classification algorithm where each tissue sample is considered as the center of a cluster which is a ball. The results of numerical experiments confirm that the classification algorithm in combination with the feature selection algorithm perform slightly better than the published results for multi-class classifiers based on support vector machines for this data set.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003000439
A polynomial ring construction for the classification of data
- Authors: Kelarev, Andrei , Yearwood, John , Vamplew, Peter
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Bulletin of the Australian Mathematical Society Vol. 79, no. 2 (2009), p. 213-225
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- Description: Drensky and Lakatos (Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 357 (Springer, Berlin, 1989), pp. 181-188) have established a convenient property of certain ideals in polynomial quotient rings, which can now be used to determine error-correcting capabilities of combined multiple classifiers following a standard approach explained in the well-known monograph by Witten and Frank (Data Mining: Practical Machine Learning Tools and Techniques (Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2005)). We strengthen and generalise the result of Drensky and Lakatos by demonstrating that the corresponding nice property remains valid in a much larger variety of constructions and applies to more general types of ideals. Examples show that our theorems do not extend to larger classes of ring constructions and cannot be simplified or generalised.
The processes of ICT diffusion in technology projects
- 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
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- 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
Rule-based classifiers and meta classifiers for identification of cardiac autonomic neuropathy progression
- Authors: Jelinek, Herbert , Kelarev, Andrei , Stranieri, Andrew , Yearwood, John
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: International Journal of Information Science and Computer Mathematics Vol. 5, no. 2 (2012), p. 49-53
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- Description: We investigate and compare several rule-based classifiers and meta classifiers in their ability to obtain multi-class classifications of cardiac autonomic neuropathy (CAN) and its progression. The best results obtained in our experiments are significantly better than the outcomes published previously in the literature for analogous CAN identification tasks or simpler binary classification tasks.