ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.
In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.
Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.
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- Creators: Davulcu, Hasan
emotion dimensions like arousal and valence are gaining popularity within the research
community due to an increase in the availability of datasets annotated with these
emotions. Unlike the discrete emotions, continuous emotions allow modeling of subtle
and complex affect dimensions but are difficult to predict.
Dimension reduction techniques form the core of emotion recognition systems and
help create a new feature space that is more helpful in predicting emotions. But these
techniques do not necessarily guarantee a better predictive capability as most of them
are unsupervised, especially in regression learning. In emotion recognition literature,
supervised dimension reduction techniques have not been explored much and in this
work a solution is provided through probabilistic topic models. Topic models provide
a strong probabilistic framework to embed new learning paradigms and modalities.
In this thesis, the graphical structure of Latent Dirichlet Allocation has been explored
and new models tuned to emotion recognition and change detection have been built.
In this work, it has been shown that the double mixture structure of topic models
helps 1) to visualize feature patterns, and 2) to project features onto a topic simplex
that is more predictive of human emotions, when compared to popular techniques
like PCA and KernelPCA. Traditionally, topic models have been used on quantized
features but in this work, a continuous topic model called the Dirichlet Gaussian
Mixture model has been proposed. Evaluation of DGMM has shown that while modeling
videos, performance of LDA models can be replicated even without quantizing
the features. Until now, topic models have not been explored in a supervised context
of video analysis and thus a Regularized supervised topic model (RSLDA) that
models video and audio features is introduced. RSLDA learning algorithm performs
both dimension reduction and regularized linear regression simultaneously, and has outperformed supervised dimension reduction techniques like SPCA and Correlation
based feature selection algorithms. In a first of its kind, two new topic models, Adaptive
temporal topic model (ATTM) and SLDA for change detection (SLDACD) have
been developed for predicting concept drift in time series data. These models do not
assume independence of consecutive frames and outperform traditional topic models
in detecting local and global changes respectively.
This dissertation studies how to effectively discover information in health forums. Several challenges have been identified. First, the existing work relies on the syntactic information unit, such as a sentence, a post, or a thread, to bind different pieces of information in a forum. However, most of information discovery tasks should be based on the semantic information unit, a patient. For instance, given a keyword query that involves the relationship between a treatment and side effects, it is expected that the matched keywords refer to the same patient. In this work, patient-centered mining is proposed to mine patient semantic information units. In a patient information unit, the health information, such as diseases, symptoms, treatments, effects, and etc., is connected by the corresponding patient.
Second, the information published in health forums has varying degree of quality. Some information includes patient-reported personal health experience, while others can be hearsay. In this work, a context-aware experience extraction framework is proposed to mine patient-reported personal health experience, which can be used for evidence-based knowledge discovery or finding patients with similar experience.
At last, the proposed patient-centered and experience-aware mining framework is used to build a patient health information database for effectively discovering adverse drug reactions (ADRs) from health forums. ADRs have become a serious health problem and even a leading cause of death in the United States. Health forums provide valuable evidences in a large scale and in a timely fashion through the active participation of patients, caregivers, and doctors. Empirical evaluation shows the effectiveness of the proposed approach.
In this research, local academics with cultural expertise collaborated to locate and download content from 292 Facebook groups organized under three (3) major umbrella types: Religious Terrorist Violence, Political Intolerance and Issue, and Target-based Intolerance between June2016 - December 2016 period. Dates of real extremist attacks were aligned with corresponding Facebook message streams, identified posts and comments related to the targets and perpetrators of the attacks, and proceeded to use the context of the attacks, their effects, the nature and structure of underlying extremist and counter-violent extremist networks, to study the narratives and trends over time.
The dissertation outlines novel domain adaptation approaches across different feature spaces; (i) a linear Support Vector Machine model for domain alignment; (ii) a nonlinear kernel based approach that embeds domain-aligned data for enhanced classification; (iii) a hierarchical model implemented using deep learning, that estimates domain-aligned hash values for the source and target data, and (iv) a proposal for a feature selection technique to reduce cross-domain disparity. These adaptation procedures are tested and validated across a range of computer vision applications like object classification, facial expression recognition, digit recognition, and activity recognition. The dissertation also provides a unique perspective of domain adaptation literature from the point-of-view of linear, nonlinear and hierarchical feature spaces. The dissertation concludes with a discussion on the future directions for research that highlight the role of domain adaptation in an era of rapid advancements in artificial intelligence.