This collection includes both ASU Theses and Dissertations, submitted by graduate students, and the Barrett, Honors College theses submitted by undergraduate students. 

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Description
While discrete emotions like joy, anger, disgust etc. are quite popular, continuous

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

While discrete emotions like joy, anger, disgust etc. are quite popular, continuous

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.
ContributorsLade, Prasanth (Author) / Panchanathan, Sethuraman (Thesis advisor) / Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Balasubramanian, Vineeth N (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
Social Computing is an area of computer science concerned with dynamics of communities and cultures, created through computer-mediated social interaction. Various social media platforms, such as social network services and microblogging, enable users to come together and create social movements expressing their opinions on diverse sets of issues, events, complaints,

Social Computing is an area of computer science concerned with dynamics of communities and cultures, created through computer-mediated social interaction. Various social media platforms, such as social network services and microblogging, enable users to come together and create social movements expressing their opinions on diverse sets of issues, events, complaints, grievances, and goals. Methods for monitoring and summarizing these types of sociopolitical trends, its leaders and followers, messages, and dynamics are needed. In this dissertation, a framework comprising of community and content-based computational methods is presented to provide insights for multilingual and noisy political social media content. First, a model is developed to predict the emergence of viral hashtag breakouts, using network features. Next, another model is developed to detect and compare individual and organizational accounts, by using a set of domain and language-independent features. The third model exposes contentious issues, driving reactionary dynamics between opposing camps. The fourth model develops community detection and visualization methods to reveal underlying dynamics and key messages that drive dynamics. The final model presents a use case methodology for detecting and monitoring foreign influence, wherein a state actor and news media under its control attempt to shift public opinion by framing information to support multiple adversarial narratives that facilitate their goals. In each case, a discussion of novel aspects and contributions of the models is presented, as well as quantitative and qualitative evaluations. An analysis of multiple conflict situations will be conducted, covering areas in the UK, Bangladesh, Libya and the Ukraine where adversarial framing lead to polarization, declines in social cohesion, social unrest, and even civil wars (e.g., Libya and the Ukraine).
ContributorsAlzahrani, Sultan (Author) / Davulcu, Hasan (Thesis advisor) / Corman, Steve R. (Committee member) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Hsiao, Ihan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
With the rise of Online Social Networks (OSN) in the last decade, social network analysis has become a crucial research topic. The OSN graphs have unique properties that distinguish them from other types of graphs. In this thesis, five month Tweet corpus collected from Bangladesh - between June 2016 and

With the rise of Online Social Networks (OSN) in the last decade, social network analysis has become a crucial research topic. The OSN graphs have unique properties that distinguish them from other types of graphs. In this thesis, five month Tweet corpus collected from Bangladesh - between June 2016 and October 2016 is analyzed, in order to detect accounts that belong to groups. These groups consist of official and non-official twitter handles of political organizations and NGOs in Bangladesh. A set of network, temporal, spatial and behavioral features are proposed to discriminate between accounts belonging to individual twitter users, news, groups and organization leaders. Finally, the experimental results are presented and a subset of relevant features is identified that lead to a generalizable model. Detection of tiny number of groups from large network is achieved with 0.8 precision, 0.75 recall and 0.77 F1 score. The domain independent network and behavioral features and models developed here are suitable for solving twitter account classification problem in any context.
ContributorsGore, Chinmay Chandrashekhar (Author) / Davulcu, Hasan (Thesis advisor) / Hsiao, Ihan (Committee member) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017