5 resultados para embeddings

em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Internet traffic classification is a relevant and mature research field, anyway of growing importance and with still open technical challenges, also due to the pervasive presence of Internet-connected devices into everyday life. We claim the need for innovative traffic classification solutions capable of being lightweight, of adopting a domain-based approach, of not only concentrating on application-level protocol categorization but also classifying Internet traffic by subject. To this purpose, this paper originally proposes a classification solution that leverages domain name information extracted from IPFIX summaries, DNS logs, and DHCP leases, with the possibility to be applied to any kind of traffic. Our proposed solution is based on an extension of Word2vec unsupervised learning techniques running on a specialized Apache Spark cluster. In particular, learning techniques are leveraged to generate word-embeddings from a mixed dataset composed by domain names and natural language corpuses in a lightweight way and with general applicability. The paper also reports lessons learnt from our implementation and deployment experience that demonstrates that our solution can process 5500 IPFIX summaries per second on an Apache Spark cluster with 1 slave instance in Amazon EC2 at a cost of $ 3860 year. Reported experimental results about Precision, Recall, F-Measure, Accuracy, and Cohen's Kappa show the feasibility and effectiveness of the proposal. The experiments prove that words contained in domain names do have a relation with the kind of traffic directed towards them, therefore using specifically trained word embeddings we are able to classify them in customizable categories. We also show that training word embeddings on larger natural language corpuses leads improvements in terms of precision up to 180%.

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Artificial Intelligence (AI) has substantially influenced numerous disciplines in recent years. Biology, chemistry, and bioinformatics are among them, with significant advances in protein structure prediction, paratope prediction, protein-protein interactions (PPIs), and antibody-antigen interactions. Understanding PPIs is critical since they are responsible for practically everything living and have several uses in vaccines, cancer, immunology, and inflammatory illnesses. Machine Learning (ML) offers enormous potential for effectively simulating antibody-antigen interactions and improving in-silico optimization of therapeutic antibodies for desired features, including binding activity, stability, and low immunogenicity. This research looks at the use of AI algorithms to better understand antibody-antigen interactions, and it further expands and explains several difficulties encountered in the field. Furthermore, we contribute by presenting a method that outperforms existing state-of-the-art strategies in paratope prediction from sequence data.

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This thesis develops AI methods as a contribution to computational musicology, an interdisciplinary field that studies music with computers. In systematic musicology a composition is defined as the combination of harmony, melody and rhythm. According to de La Borde, harmony alone "merits the name of composition". This thesis focuses on analysing the harmony from a computational perspective. We concentrate on symbolic music representation and address the problem of formally representing chord progressions in western music compositions. Informally, chords are sets of pitches played simultaneously, and chord progressions constitute the harmony of a composition. Our approach combines ML techniques with knowledge-based techniques. We design and implement the Modal Harmony ontology (MHO), using OWL. It formalises one of the most important theories in western music: the Modal Harmony Theory. We propose and experiment with different types of embedding methods to encode chords, inspired by NLP and adapted to the music domain, using both statistical (extensional) knowledge by relying on a huge dataset of chord annotations (ChoCo), intensional knowledge by relying on MHO and a combination of the two. The methods are evaluated on two musicologically relevant tasks: chord classification and music structure segmentation. The former is verified by comparing the results of the Odd One Out algorithm to the classification obtained with MHO. Good performances (accuracy: 0.86) are achieved. We feed a RNN for the latter, using our embeddings. Results show that the best performance (F1: 0.6) is achieved with embeddings that combine both approaches. Our method outpeforms the state of the art (F1 = 0.42) for symbolic music structure segmentation. It is worth noticing that embeddings based only on MHO almost equal the best performance (F1 = 0.58). We remark that those embeddings only require the ontology as an input as opposed to other approaches that rely on large datasets.

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Dopo lo sviluppo dei primi casi di Covid-19 in Cina nell’autunno del 2019, ad inizio 2020 l’intero pianeta è precipitato in una pandemia globale che ha stravolto le nostre vite con conseguenze che non si vivevano dall’influenza spagnola. La grandissima quantità di paper scientifici in continua pubblicazione sul coronavirus e virus ad esso affini ha portato alla creazione di un unico dataset dinamico chiamato CORD19 e distribuito gratuitamente. Poter reperire informazioni utili in questa mole di dati ha ulteriormente acceso i riflettori sugli information retrieval systems, capaci di recuperare in maniera rapida ed efficace informazioni preziose rispetto a una domanda dell'utente detta query. Di particolare rilievo è stata la TREC-COVID Challenge, competizione per lo sviluppo di un sistema di IR addestrato e testato sul dataset CORD19. Il problema principale è dato dal fatto che la grande mole di documenti è totalmente non etichettata e risulta dunque impossibile addestrare modelli di reti neurali direttamente su di essi. Per aggirare il problema abbiamo messo a punto nuove soluzioni self-supervised, a cui abbiamo applicato lo stato dell'arte del deep metric learning e dell'NLP. Il deep metric learning, che sta avendo un enorme successo soprattuto nella computer vision, addestra il modello ad "avvicinare" tra loro immagini simili e "allontanare" immagini differenti. Dato che sia le immagini che il testo vengono rappresentati attraverso vettori di numeri reali (embeddings) si possano utilizzare le stesse tecniche per "avvicinare" tra loro elementi testuali pertinenti (e.g. una query e un paragrafo) e "allontanare" elementi non pertinenti. Abbiamo dunque addestrato un modello SciBERT con varie loss, che ad oggi rappresentano lo stato dell'arte del deep metric learning, in maniera completamente self-supervised direttamente e unicamente sul dataset CORD19, valutandolo poi sul set formale TREC-COVID attraverso un sistema di IR e ottenendo risultati interessanti.

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This dissertation describes a deepening study about Visual Odometry problem tackled with transformer architectures. The existing VO algorithms are based on heavily hand-crafted features and are not able to generalize well to new environments. To train them, we need carefully fine-tune the hyper-parameters and the network architecture. We propose to tackle the VO problem with transformer because it is a general-purpose architecture and because it was designed to transformer sequences of data from a domain to another one, which is the case of the VO problem. Our first goal is to create synthetic dataset using BlenderProc2 framework to mitigate the problem of the dataset scarcity. The second goal is to tackle the VO problem by using different versions of the transformer architecture, which will be pre-trained on the synthetic dataset and fine-tuned on the real dataset, KITTI dataset. Our approach is defined as follows: we use a feature-extractor to extract features embeddings from a sequence of images, then we feed this sequence of embeddings to the transformer architecture, finally, an MLP is used to predict the sequence of camera poses.