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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

Benchmarking authorship attribution techniques using over a thousand books by fifty Victorian era novelists

Gungor, Abdulmecit 03 April 2018 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Authorship attribution (AA) is the process of identifying the author of a given text and from the machine learning perspective, it can be seen as a classification problem. In the literature, there are a lot of classification methods for which feature extraction techniques are conducted. In this thesis, we explore information retrieval techniques such as Word2Vec, paragraph2vec, and other useful feature selection and extraction techniques for a given text with different classifiers. We have performed experiments on novels that are extracted from GDELT database by using different features such as bag of words, n-grams or newly developed techniques like Word2Vec. To improve our success rate, we have combined some useful features some of which are diversity measure of text, bag of words, bigrams, specific words that are written differently between English and American authors. Support vector machine classifiers with nu-SVC type is observed to give best success rates on the stacked useful feature set. The main purpose of this work is to lay the foundations of feature extraction techniques in AA. These are lexical, character-level, syntactic, semantic, application specific features. We also have aimed to offer a new data resource for the author attribution research community and demonstrate how it can be used to extract features as in any kind of AA problem. The dataset we have introduced consists of works of Victorian era authors and the main feature extraction techniques are shown with exemplary code snippets for audiences in different knowledge domains. Feature extraction approaches and implementation with different classifiers are employed in simple ways such that it would also serve as a beginner step to AA. Some feature extraction techniques introduced in this work are also meant to be employed in different NLP tasks such as sentiment analysis with Word2Vec or text summarization. Using the introduced NLP tasks and feature extraction techniques one can start to implement them on our dataset. We have also introduced several methods to implement extracted features in different methodologies such as feature stack engineering with different classifiers, or using Word2Vec to create sentence level vectors.
2

Automated image classification via unsupervised feature learning by K-means

Karimy Dehkordy, Hossein 09 July 2015 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Research on image classification has grown rapidly in the field of machine learning. Many methods have already been implemented for image classification. Among all these methods, best results have been reported by neural network-based techniques. One of the most important steps in automated image classification is feature extraction. Feature extraction includes two parts: feature construction and feature selection. Many methods for feature extraction exist, but the best ones are related to deep-learning approaches such as network-in-network or deep convolutional network algorithms. Deep learning tries to focus on the level of abstraction and find higher levels of abstraction from the previous level by having multiple layers of hidden layers. The two main problems with using deep-learning approaches are the speed and the number of parameters that should be configured. Small changes or poor selection of parameters can alter the results completely or even make them worse. Tuning these parameters is usually impossible for normal users who do not have super computers because one should run the algorithm and try to tune the parameters according to the results obtained. Thus, this process can be very time consuming. This thesis attempts to address the speed and configuration issues found with traditional deep-network approaches. Some of the traditional methods of unsupervised learning are used to build an automated image-classification approach that takes less time both to configure and to run.

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