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Description
Graph theory is a critical component of computer science and software engineering, with algorithms concerning graph traversal and comprehension powering much of the largest problems in both industry and research. Engineers and researchers often have an accurate view of their target graph, however they struggle to implement a correct, and

Graph theory is a critical component of computer science and software engineering, with algorithms concerning graph traversal and comprehension powering much of the largest problems in both industry and research. Engineers and researchers often have an accurate view of their target graph, however they struggle to implement a correct, and efficient, search over that graph.

To facilitate rapid, correct, efficient, and intuitive development of graph based solutions we propose a new programming language construct - the search statement. Given a supra-root node, a procedure which determines the children of a given parent node, and optional definitions of the fail-fast acceptance or rejection of a solution, the search statement can conduct a search over any graph or network. Structurally, this statement is modelled after the common switch statement and is put into a largely imperative/procedural context to allow for immediate and intuitive development by most programmers. The Go programming language has been used as a foundation and proof-of-concept of the search statement. A Go compiler is provided which implements this construct.
ContributorsHenderson, Christopher (Author) / Bansal, Ajay (Thesis advisor) / Lindquist, Timothy (Committee member) / Acuna, Ruben (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Recommendation systems provide recommendations based on user behavior andcontent data. User behavior and content data are fed to machine learning algorithms to train them and give recommendations to the users. These algorithms need a large amount of data for a reasonable conversion rate. But for small applications, the available amount of data is

Recommendation systems provide recommendations based on user behavior andcontent data. User behavior and content data are fed to machine learning algorithms to train them and give recommendations to the users. These algorithms need a large amount of data for a reasonable conversion rate. But for small applications, the available amount of data is minimal, leading to high recommendation aberrations. Also, when an existing large scaled application with a high amount of available data uses a new recommendation system, it requires some time and testing to decide which recommendation algorithm is best suited to get higher conversion rates. This learning curve costs highly when the user base and data size are significantly high. In this thesis, A/B testing is used with manual intervention in the decision-making of recommendation systems. To understand the effectiveness of the recommendations, user interaction data is compared to compare experiences. Based on the comparisons, the experiments conclude the effectiveness of A/B testing for the recommendation system.
ContributorsVaidya, Yogesh Vinayak (Author) / Bansal, Ajay (Thesis advisor) / Findler, Michael (Committee member) / Chakravarthi, Bharatesh (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Availability of affordable image and video capturing devices as well as rapid development of social networking and content sharing websites has led to the creation of new type of content, Social Media. Any system serving the end user’s query search request should not only take the relevant images into consideration

Availability of affordable image and video capturing devices as well as rapid development of social networking and content sharing websites has led to the creation of new type of content, Social Media. Any system serving the end user’s query search request should not only take the relevant images into consideration but they also need to be divergent for a well-rounded description of a query. As a result, the automated optimization of image retrieval results that are also divergent becomes exceedingly important.



The main focus of this thesis is to use visual description of a landmark by choosing the most diverse pictures that best describe all the details of the queried location from community-contributed datasets. For this, an end-to-end framework has been built, to retrieve relevant results that are also diverse. Different retrieval re-ranking and diversification strategies are evaluated to find a balance between relevance and diversification. Clustering techniques are employed to improve divergence. A unique fusion approach has been adopted to overcome the dilemma of selecting an appropriate clustering technique and the corresponding parameters, given a set of data to be investigated. Extensive experiments have been conducted on the Flickr Div150Cred dataset that has 30 different landmark locations. The results obtained are promising when evaluated on metrics for relevance and diversification.
ContributorsKalakota, Vaibhav Reddy (Author) / Bansal, Ajay (Thesis advisor) / Bansal, Srividya (Committee member) / Findler, Michael (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020