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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Concepts Extraction and Change Detection from Navigated Information over the Internet

Chang, Chia-Hao 25 July 2004 (has links)
The emergence of the Internet has made the global information communications much easier than before. Users can navigate the desired information over the Internet by means of search engines. Even though search engine can help users search specified topic in a primary way, users usually cannot gain the overall idea of what the entire navigated results mean. In addition, information over the Internet keeps changing. Users cannot even keep track of the changes, let alone to comprehend the meanings of such changes. Consequently, this research proposes a two-stage incremental approach to figuring out the concept structure that represents the main concepts of the search results in the first stage, and keeping track of the concept changes with time based on spreading activation theory to assist users in the second stage. Experiments are conducted to examine the feasibility of our proposed approach. The first experiment is to evaluate the results from the first stage. It shows that the performance on recall and precision is quite satisfactory based on human experts¡¦ results. The second experiment is to examine the changing results from the entire proposed approach. It shows that high degree of agreement with our results is achieved from domain experts. Both experiments justify the feasibility of our proposed approach in real applications. That is, applying our proposed approach, users can easily focus on the topic they are interested in and learn its trend with great support. Keywords: Internet, Concepts Extraction, Concept Change Detection, Spreading Activation Theory.
2

Concept Extraction With Change Detection From Navigated Information

Lin, Tzu-hsiang 07 July 2005 (has links)
To manage the information flood in the Internet, we usually navigate specific information using the provided search engines. Search engines are convenient but with limited functions. For example, it is impractical and impossible to browse through the entire collected information for us to gain an overall picture about what the navigated information stands for. To do so, we need an appropriate approach to automatically extracting concepts from the navigated information to assist users to easily and quickly gain the primary understanding toward a topic that interests users. In this research, we propose an approach to extracting concepts from the navigated web information and detecting the concept changes over time. It basically includes two stages. In the first stage, information is decomposed into paragraphs and they are clustered with key terms identified through the aid of latent semantic indexing method. Concepts are represented in the form of paragraph summary and associated key terms, which allows the user to easily comprehend what they describe. The second stage is to adaptively modify the concept structure to detect concept changes. With new information added, the concepts could be merging, splitting, or even emerging with time. Three experiments are conducted in this research to verify the proposed approach. Results of the first and second experiments show both high recall and high precision that matches the predefined concept categories. The last one is an illustrated real case application on the tsunami event. It shows that we can easily grasp different concepts of the tsunami reports and realize their changes by using our approach. The feasibility of employing our approach is thus justified.

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