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- All Subjects: Computer Engineering
- All Subjects: Web Scraping
- Creators: Bansal, Ajay
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.
However, poor performance of IQA algorithms has been observed due to complex statistical computations involved. General Purpose Graphics Processing Unit (GPGPU) programming is one of the solutions proposed to optimize the performance of these algorithms.
This thesis presents a Compute Unified Device Architecture (CUDA) based optimized implementation of full reference IQA algorithm, Visual Signal to Noise Ratio (VSNR) that uses M-level 2D Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) with 9/7 biorthogonal filters among other statistical computations. The presented implementation is tested upon four different image quality databases containing images with multiple distortions and sizes ranging from 512 x 512 to 1600 x 1280. The CUDA implementation of VSNR shows a speedup of over 32x for 1600 x 1280 images. It is observed that the speedup scales with the increase in size of images. The results showed that the implementation is fast enough to use VSNR on high definition videos with a frame rate of 60 fps. This work presents the optimizations made due to the use of GPU’s constant memory and reuse of allocated memory on the GPU. Also, it shows the performance improvement using profiler driven GPGPU development in CUDA. The presented implementation can be deployed in production combined with existing applications.
This project aims to incorporate the aspect of sentiment analysis into traditional stock analysis to enhance stock rating predictions by applying a reliance on the opinion of various stocks from the Internet. Headlines from eight major news publications and conversations from Yahoo! Finance’s “Conversations” feature were parsed through the Valence Aware Dictionary for Sentiment Reasoning (VADER) natural language processing package to determine numerical polarities which represented positivity or negativity for a given stock ticker. These generated polarities were paired with stock metrics typically observed by stock analysts as the feature set for a Logistic Regression machine learning model. The model was trained on roughly 1500 major stocks to determine a binary classification between a “Buy” or “Not Buy” rating for each stock, and the results of the model were inserted into the back-end of the Agora Web UI which emulates search engine behavior specifically for stocks found in NYSE and NASDAQ. The model reported an accuracy of 82.5% and for most major stocks, the model’s prediction correlated with stock analysts’ ratings. Given the volatility of the stock market and the propensity for hive-mind behavior in online forums, the performance of the Logistic Regression model would benefit from incorporating historical stock data and more sources of opinion to balance any subjectivity in the model.
This project aims to incorporate the aspect of sentiment analysis into traditional stock analysis to enhance stock rating predictions by applying a reliance on the opinion of various stocks from the Internet. Headlines from eight major news publications and conversations from Yahoo! Finance’s “Conversations” feature were parsed through the Valence Aware Dictionary for Sentiment Reasoning (VADER) natural language processing package to determine numerical polarities which represented positivity or negativity for a given stock ticker. These generated polarities were paired with stock metrics typically observed by stock analysts as the feature set for a Logistic Regression machine learning model. The model was trained on roughly 1500 major stocks to determine a binary classification between a “Buy” or “Not Buy” rating for each stock, and the results of the model were inserted into the back-end of the Agora Web UI which emulates search engine behavior specifically for stocks found in NYSE and NASDAQ. The model reported an accuracy of 82.5% and for most major stocks, the model’s prediction correlated with stock analysts’ ratings. Given the volatility of the stock market and the propensity for hive-mind behavior in online forums, the performance of the Logistic Regression model would benefit from incorporating historical stock data and more sources of opinion to balance any subjectivity in the model.