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Description
US Senate is the venue of political debates where the federal bills are formed and voted. Senators show their support/opposition along the bills with their votes. This information makes it possible to extract the polarity of the senators. Similarly, blogosphere plays an increasingly important role as a forum for public

US Senate is the venue of political debates where the federal bills are formed and voted. Senators show their support/opposition along the bills with their votes. This information makes it possible to extract the polarity of the senators. Similarly, blogosphere plays an increasingly important role as a forum for public debate. Authors display sentiment toward issues, organizations or people using a natural language.

In this research, given a mixed set of senators/blogs debating on a set of political issues from opposing camps, I use signed bipartite graphs for modeling debates, and I propose an algorithm for partitioning both the opinion holders (senators or blogs) and the issues (bills or topics) comprising the debate into binary opposing camps. Simultaneously, my algorithm scales the entities on a univariate scale. Using this scale, a researcher can identify moderate and extreme senators/blogs within each camp, and polarizing versus unifying issues. Through performance evaluations I show that my proposed algorithm provides an effective solution to the problem, and performs much better than existing baseline algorithms adapted to solve this new problem. In my experiments, I used both real data from political blogosphere and US Congress records, as well as synthetic data which were obtained by varying polarization and degree distribution of the vertices of the graph to show the robustness of my algorithm.

I also applied my algorithm on all the terms of the US Senate to the date for longitudinal analysis and developed a web based interactive user interface www.PartisanScale.com to visualize the analysis.

US politics is most often polarized with respect to the left/right alignment of the entities. However, certain issues do not reflect the polarization due to political parties, but observe a split correlating to the demographics of the senators, or simply receive consensus. I propose a hierarchical clustering algorithm that identifies groups of bills that share the same polarization characteristics. I developed a web based interactive user interface www.ControversyAnalysis.com to visualize the clusters while providing a synopsis through distribution charts, word clouds, and heat maps.
ContributorsGokalp, Sedat (Author) / Davulcu, Hasan (Thesis advisor) / Sen, Arunabha (Committee member) / Liu, Huan (Committee member) / Woodward, Mark (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
Computer Vision as a eld has gone through signicant changes in the last decade.

The eld has seen tremendous success in designing learning systems with hand-crafted

features and in using representation learning to extract better features. In this dissertation

some novel approaches to representation learning and task learning are studied.

Multiple-instance learning which is

Computer Vision as a eld has gone through signicant changes in the last decade.

The eld has seen tremendous success in designing learning systems with hand-crafted

features and in using representation learning to extract better features. In this dissertation

some novel approaches to representation learning and task learning are studied.

Multiple-instance learning which is generalization of supervised learning, is one

example of task learning that is discussed. In particular, a novel non-parametric k-

NN-based multiple-instance learning is proposed, which is shown to outperform other

existing approaches. This solution is applied to a diabetic retinopathy pathology

detection problem eectively.

In cases of representation learning, generality of neural features are investigated

rst. This investigation leads to some critical understanding and results in feature

generality among datasets. The possibility of learning from a mentor network instead

of from labels is then investigated. Distillation of dark knowledge is used to eciently

mentor a small network from a pre-trained large mentor network. These studies help

in understanding representation learning with smaller and compressed networks.
ContributorsVenkatesan, Ragav (Author) / Li, Baoxin (Thesis advisor) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Yang, Yezhou (Committee member) / Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
The performance of most of the visual computing tasks depends on the quality of the features extracted from the raw data. Insightful feature representation increases the performance of many learning algorithms by exposing the underlying explanatory factors of the output for the unobserved input. A good representation should also handle

The performance of most of the visual computing tasks depends on the quality of the features extracted from the raw data. Insightful feature representation increases the performance of many learning algorithms by exposing the underlying explanatory factors of the output for the unobserved input. A good representation should also handle anomalies in the data such as missing samples and noisy input caused by the undesired, external factors of variation. It should also reduce the data redundancy. Over the years, many feature extraction processes have been invented to produce good representations of raw images and videos.

The feature extraction processes can be categorized into three groups. The first group contains processes that are hand-crafted for a specific task. Hand-engineering features requires the knowledge of domain experts and manual labor. However, the feature extraction process is interpretable and explainable. Next group contains the latent-feature extraction processes. While the original feature lies in a high-dimensional space, the relevant factors for a task often lie on a lower dimensional manifold. The latent-feature extraction employs hidden variables to expose the underlying data properties that cannot be directly measured from the input. Latent features seek a specific structure such as sparsity or low-rank into the derived representation through sophisticated optimization techniques. The last category is that of deep features. These are obtained by passing raw input data with minimal pre-processing through a deep network. Its parameters are computed by iteratively minimizing a task-based loss.

In this dissertation, I present four pieces of work where I create and learn suitable data representations. The first task employs hand-crafted features to perform clinically-relevant retrieval of diabetic retinopathy images. The second task uses latent features to perform content-adaptive image enhancement. The third task ranks a pair of images based on their aestheticism. The goal of the last task is to capture localized image artifacts in small datasets with patch-level labels. For both these tasks, I propose novel deep architectures and show significant improvement over the previous state-of-art approaches. A suitable combination of feature representations augmented with an appropriate learning approach can increase performance for most visual computing tasks.
ContributorsChandakkar, Parag Shridhar (Author) / Li, Baoxin (Thesis advisor) / Yang, Yezhou (Committee member) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
Machine learning models convert raw data in the form of video, images, audio,

text, etc. into feature representations that are convenient for computational process-

ing. Deep neural networks have proven to be very efficient feature extractors for a

variety of machine learning tasks. Generative models based on deep neural networks

introduce constraints on the

Machine learning models convert raw data in the form of video, images, audio,

text, etc. into feature representations that are convenient for computational process-

ing. Deep neural networks have proven to be very efficient feature extractors for a

variety of machine learning tasks. Generative models based on deep neural networks

introduce constraints on the feature space to learn transferable and disentangled rep-

resentations. Transferable feature representations help in training machine learning

models that are robust across different distributions of data. For example, with the

application of transferable features in domain adaptation, models trained on a source

distribution can be applied to a data from a target distribution even though the dis-

tributions may be different. In style transfer and image-to-image translation, disen-

tangled representations allow for the separation of style and content when translating

images.

This thesis examines learning transferable data representations in novel deep gen-

erative models. The Semi-Supervised Adversarial Translator (SAT) utilizes adversar-

ial methods and cross-domain weight sharing in a neural network to extract trans-

ferable representations. These transferable interpretations can then be decoded into

the original image or a similar image in another domain. The Explicit Disentangling

Network (EDN) utilizes generative methods to disentangle images into their core at-

tributes and then segments sets of related attributes. The EDN can separate these

attributes by controlling the ow of information using a novel combination of losses

and network architecture. This separation of attributes allows precise modi_cations

to speci_c components of the data representation, boosting the performance of ma-

chine learning tasks. The effectiveness of these models is evaluated across domain

adaptation, style transfer, and image-to-image translation tasks.
ContributorsEusebio, Jose Miguel Ang (Author) / Panchanathan, Sethuraman (Thesis advisor) / Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member) / Venkateswara, Hemanth (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Fraud is defined as the utilization of deception for illegal gain by hiding the true nature of the activity. While organizations lose around $3.7 trillion in revenue due to financial crimes and fraud worldwide, they can affect all levels of society significantly. In this dissertation, I focus on credit card

Fraud is defined as the utilization of deception for illegal gain by hiding the true nature of the activity. While organizations lose around $3.7 trillion in revenue due to financial crimes and fraud worldwide, they can affect all levels of society significantly. In this dissertation, I focus on credit card fraud in online transactions. Every online transaction comes with a fraud risk and it is the merchant's liability to detect and stop fraudulent transactions. Merchants utilize various mechanisms to prevent and manage fraud such as automated fraud detection systems and manual transaction reviews by expert fraud analysts. Many proposed solutions mostly focus on fraud detection accuracy and ignore financial considerations. Also, the highly effective manual review process is overlooked. First, I propose Profit Optimizing Neural Risk Manager (PONRM), a selective classifier that (a) constitutes optimal collaboration between machine learning models and human expertise under industrial constraints, (b) is cost and profit sensitive. I suggest directions on how to characterize fraudulent behavior and assess the risk of a transaction. I show that my framework outperforms cost-sensitive and cost-insensitive baselines on three real-world merchant datasets. While PONRM is able to work with many supervised learners and obtain convincing results, utilizing probability outputs directly from the trained model itself can pose problems, especially in deep learning as softmax output is not a true uncertainty measure. This phenomenon, and the wide and rapid adoption of deep learning by practitioners brought unintended consequences in many situations such as in the infamous case of Google Photos' racist image recognition algorithm; thus, necessitated the utilization of the quantified uncertainty for each prediction. There have been recent efforts towards quantifying uncertainty in conventional deep learning methods (e.g., dropout as Bayesian approximation); however, their optimal use in decision making is often overlooked and understudied. Thus, I present a mixed-integer programming framework for selective classification called MIPSC, that investigates and combines model uncertainty and predictive mean to identify optimal classification and rejection regions. I also extend this framework to cost-sensitive settings (MIPCSC) and focus on the critical real-world problem, online fraud management and show that my approach outperforms industry standard methods significantly for online fraud management in real-world settings.
ContributorsYildirim, Mehmet Yigit (Author) / Davulcu, Hasan (Thesis advisor) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Committee member) / Huang, Dijiang (Committee member) / Hsiao, Ihan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Internet and social media devices created a new public space for debate on political

and social topics (Papacharissi 2002; Himelboim 2010). Hotly debated issues

span all spheres of human activity; from liberal vs. conservative politics, to radical

vs. counter-radical religious debate, to climate change debate in scientific community,

to globalization debate in economics, and

Internet and social media devices created a new public space for debate on political

and social topics (Papacharissi 2002; Himelboim 2010). Hotly debated issues

span all spheres of human activity; from liberal vs. conservative politics, to radical

vs. counter-radical religious debate, to climate change debate in scientific community,

to globalization debate in economics, and to nuclear disarmament debate in

security. Many prominent ’camps’ have emerged within Internet debate rhetoric and

practice (Dahlberg, n.d.).

In this research I utilized feature extraction and model fitting techniques to process

the rhetoric found in the web sites of 23 Indonesian Islamic religious organizations,

later with 26 similar organizations from the United Kingdom to profile their

ideology and activity patterns along a hypothesized radical/counter-radical scale, and

presented an end-to-end system that is able to help researchers to visualize the data

in an interactive fashion on a time line. The subject data of this study is the articles

downloaded from the web sites of these organizations dating from 2001 to 2011,

and in 2013. I developed algorithms to rank these organizations by assigning them

to probable positions on the scale. I showed that the developed Rasch model fits

the data using Andersen’s LR-test (likelihood ratio). I created a gold standard of

the ranking of these organizations through an expertise elicitation tool. Then using

my system I computed expert-to-expert agreements, and then presented experimental

results comparing the performance of three baseline methods to show that the

Rasch model not only outperforms the baseline methods, but it was also the only

system that performs at expert-level accuracy.

I developed an end-to-end system that receives list of organizations from experts,

mines their web corpus, prepare discourse topic lists with expert support, and then

ranks them on scales with partial expert interaction, and finally presents them on an

easy to use web based analytic system.
ContributorsTikves, Sukru (Author) / Davulcu, Hasan (Thesis advisor) / Sen, Arunabha (Committee member) / Liu, Huan (Committee member) / Woodward, Mark (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Computational visual aesthetics has recently become an active research area. Existing state-of-art methods formulate this as a binary classification task where a given image is predicted to be beautiful or not. In many applications such as image retrieval and enhancement, it is more important to rank images based on their

Computational visual aesthetics has recently become an active research area. Existing state-of-art methods formulate this as a binary classification task where a given image is predicted to be beautiful or not. In many applications such as image retrieval and enhancement, it is more important to rank images based on their aesthetic quality instead of binary-categorizing them. Furthermore, in such applications, it may be possible that all images belong to the same category. Hence determining the aesthetic ranking of the images is more appropriate. To this end, a novel problem of ranking images with respect to their aesthetic quality is formulated in this work. A new data-set of image pairs with relative labels is constructed by carefully selecting images from the popular AVA data-set. Unlike in aesthetics classification, there is no single threshold which would determine the ranking order of the images across the entire data-set.

This problem is attempted using a deep neural network based approach that is trained on image pairs by incorporating principles from relative learning. Results show that such relative training procedure allows the network to rank the images with a higher accuracy than a state-of-art network trained on the same set of images using binary labels. Further analyzing the results show that training a model using the image pairs learnt better aesthetic features than training on same number of individual binary labelled images.

Additionally, an attempt is made at enhancing the performance of the system by incorporating saliency related information. Given an image, humans might fixate their vision on particular parts of the image, which they might be subconsciously intrigued to. I therefore tried to utilize the saliency information both stand-alone as well as in combination with the global and local aesthetic features by performing two separate sets of experiments. In both the cases, a standard saliency model is chosen and the generated saliency maps are convoluted with the images prior to passing them to the network, thus giving higher importance to the salient regions as compared to the remaining. Thus generated saliency-images are either used independently or along with the global and the local features to train the network. Empirical results show that the saliency related aesthetic features might already be learnt by the network as a sub-set of the global features from automatic feature extraction, thus proving the redundancy of the additional saliency module.
ContributorsGattupalli, Jaya Vijetha (Author) / Li, Baoxin (Thesis advisor) / Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member) / Liang, Jianming (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Node proximity measures are commonly used for quantifying how nearby or otherwise related to two or more nodes in a graph are. Node significance measures are mainly used to find how much nodes are important in a graph. The measures of node proximity/significance have been highly effective in many predictions

Node proximity measures are commonly used for quantifying how nearby or otherwise related to two or more nodes in a graph are. Node significance measures are mainly used to find how much nodes are important in a graph. The measures of node proximity/significance have been highly effective in many predictions and applications. Despite their effectiveness, however, there are various shortcomings. One such shortcoming is a scalability problem due to their high computation costs on large size graphs and another problem on the measures is low accuracy when the significance of node and its degree in the graph are not related. The other problem is that their effectiveness is less when information for a graph is uncertain. For an uncertain graph, they require exponential computation costs to calculate ranking scores with considering all possible worlds.

In this thesis, I first introduce Locality-sensitive, Re-use promoting, approximate Personalized PageRank (LR-PPR) which is an approximate personalized PageRank calculating node rankings for the locality information for seeds without calculating the entire graph and reusing the precomputed locality information for different locality combinations. For the identification of locality information, I present Impact Neighborhood Indexing (INI) to find impact neighborhoods with nodes' fingerprints propagation on the network. For the accuracy challenge, I introduce Degree Decoupled PageRank (D2PR) technique to improve the effectiveness of PageRank based knowledge discovery, especially considering the significance of neighbors and degree of a given node. To tackle the uncertain challenge, I introduce Uncertain Personalized PageRank (UPPR) to approximately compute personalized PageRank values on uncertainties of edge existence and Interval Personalized PageRank with Integration (IPPR-I) and Interval Personalized PageRank with Mean (IPPR-M) to compute ranking scores for the case when uncertainty exists on edge weights as interval values.
ContributorsKim, Jung Hyun (Author) / Candan, K. Selcuk (Thesis advisor) / Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member) / Tong, Hanghang (Committee member) / Sapino, Maria Luisa (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
The widespread adoption of computer vision models is often constrained by the issue of domain mismatch. Models that are trained with data belonging to one distribution, perform poorly when tested with data from a different distribution. Variations in vision based data can be attributed to the following reasons, viz., differences

The widespread adoption of computer vision models is often constrained by the issue of domain mismatch. Models that are trained with data belonging to one distribution, perform poorly when tested with data from a different distribution. Variations in vision based data can be attributed to the following reasons, viz., differences in image quality (resolution, brightness, occlusion and color), changes in camera perspective, dissimilar backgrounds and an inherent diversity of the samples themselves. Machine learning techniques like transfer learning are employed to adapt computational models across distributions. Domain adaptation is a special case of transfer learning, where knowledge from a source domain is transferred to a target domain in the form of learned models and efficient feature representations.

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.
ContributorsDemakethepalli Venkateswara, Hemanth (Author) / Panchanathan, Sethuraman (Thesis advisor) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member) / Ye, Jieping (Committee member) / Chakraborty, Shayok (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017