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Introduction of the ASV Subproject Report on recent state of work and other activities eTRACES Sponsor Meeting Leipzig, 2012/05/07 Marco Büchler Natural Language Processing Group Department of Computer Science University of Leipzig What do you do with a million books? Marco Büchler 2 We do not have any native speakers for ancient languages like ancient Greek and Latin ... Marco Büchler 3 Agenda Scope of ULEI's subproject Who is involved? ACID for the eHumanities as a paradigm for successful projects Marco Büchler 4 Basics for ULEI's subproject Marco Büchler 5 A fundamental problem: How to find relevant information in massive data? Marco Büchler 6 Two initially associated documents Marco Büchler 7 Documents are linked with a direction Marco Büchler 8 Documents are linked with a direction: such as web links Marco Büchler 9 Documents are linked in both directions: A loop Marco Büchler 10 Detecting relevance: a document can be linked by more than one doc Marco Büchler 11 Detecting relevance: a document can be linked by more than one doc Marco Büchler 12 Detecting relevance on an entire digital library Marco Büchler 13 Computing relevance weights (by reliability) on an entire digital library Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PageRank The name of this strategy is Google's PageRank algorithm. Marco Büchler 14 Some aspects about Google's PageRank algorithm • Ranking is done by relevance weights (weighted links to a page) • Benefit for humanities applications: – Ranking does not necessarily need term weights as done with tf.idf • e. g. Shakespeare's „to be, or not to be“ In humanities relevant data, however, we do not have a link structure like in web based html files. Marco Büchler 15 A similar problem: Two initial documents with text re-use Marco Büchler 16 Given e. g. dating information: text re-use with direction I Our assumption: A quotation always implies a given relevance of the quoted author by the quoting author – either in a positive or negative way. Marco Büchler 17 Given e. g. dating information: text re-use with direction II Marco Büchler 18 Given e. g. dating information: text re-use with direction III Marco Büchler 19 An old discipline: Text re-use in traditional humanities Manually produced record of text re-use. Marco Büchler 20 Some research objectives In addition to Google's PageRank: – Differentiate by • Text re-use temperature • Text re-use coverage – Relevance by • high score • low score Marco Büchler 21 Some answers to the intial questions/statements What do you do with a million books? – Cultural heritage of textual re-uses – Text re-use graphs for something like a „Cultural Heritage aware PageRanking“ We do not have any native speakers for ancient languages like ancient Greek and Latin ... - Crowd sourcing provides on historical texts qualitative results, however, humanists are no native speakers - The „Cultural Heritage aware PageRanking“ approach aims to deal with relevance given by native Speakers even if they are not available, nowadays Marco Büchler 22 Who is involved? Marco Büchler 23 Active collaborators eTRACES/ULEI (Prof. Dr. Gerhard Heyer) 'The Team' Interface:projects (Dr. Uwe Crenze) The business partner Fragmentary texts (Dr. Monica Berti) 'The Humanist' Perseus Digital Library (Prof. Dr. Gregory Crane) 'The Content Provider' Marco Büchler 24 „ACID for the eHumanities“ Marco Büchler 25 A new paradigm for successful eHumanities projects • The million dollar question: How to manage an eHumanities project successfully? • After 4 years of activities in the eHumanities, you need just four questions: Acceptance: How do you get humanists' acceptance for your techniques? Complexity: Understand the complexity of necessary subtasks! e. g.: What is the archetypus? Interoperability: How can components or data interact with each other? Diversity: Understand your data! e. g.: What does text re-use mean for your digital library? The ACID paradigm for the eHumanities Marco Büchler 26 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Interoperability Marco Büchler 27 „ACID for the eHumanities“: (Data) Interoperability I Perseus DdbDP (XML) vs. Epiduke (XML) Source: Pansch, D. 2010, Data Integration Methods for Structural Heterogeneous Data in an eHumanities' Context, Bachelor thesis, 2010. Marco Büchler 28 „ACID for the eHumanities“: (Data) Interoperability II Source: Pansch, D. 2010, Data Integration Methods for Structural Heterogeneous Data in an eHumanities' Context, Bachelor thesis, 2010. Marco Büchler 29 „ACID for the eHumanities“: (Data) Interoperability III • Several kinds of interoperability issues on – Horizontal: • Data level • Algorithm level • Tool/application level – Vertical: • e. g. between data and algorithm Marco Büchler 30 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Diversity Marco Büchler 31 „ACID for the eHumanities“: (Node) Diversity Understand your data: Understand the re-used text chunks. ( a knowledge thing) Marco Büchler 32 „ACID for the eHumanities“: (Relation) Diversity Understand your data: Understand how text is re-used in your data. (an experience thing) Marco Büchler 33 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Diversity - 6 levels of text re-use Text re-use is about unsupervised quotation detection in textual data. - Level 1: Pre-processing (Cleaned and prepared data) - Level 2: Featuring (Digital fingerprint of a re-use unit) - Level 3: Feature selection (Signature of a digital fingerprint) - Level 4: Linking (Match of re-use units that have at least one feature in common) - Level 5: Scoring (Weighting of linked re-use units) - Level 6: Post-processing (e. g. post selection or views that depend on research questions) Implemented in TRACER (http://etraces.e-humanities.net/TRACER): - Tool available in 2013 - Teaching courses (full week) are planned for 2013 - More than one million permutations of implementations of the 6 levels possible (05/2012) Marco Büchler 34 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Acceptance Marco Büchler 35 Interdisciplinary collaborations: The problem! Marco Büchler 36 Computer Scientists: Change your view for understanding humanists How to get acceptance of humanists if text mining is a black box that can't be looked in? Marco Büchler 37 What we need! Transparency: How to provide user-friendly insights into complex mining techniques and machine learning? Marco Büchler 38 Jumping into the mining process: Level 0 – Initial request Marco Büchler 39 Jumping into the mining process: Level 1 - Preprocessing Marco Büchler 40 Jumping into the mining process: Level 2 - Featuring Marco Büchler 41 Jumping into the mining process: Level 3 - Selection Marco Büchler 42 Jumping into the mining process: Level 4 - Linking Marco Büchler 43 Jumping into the mining process: Level 5 - Scoring Marco Büchler 44 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Complexity Marco Büchler 45 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Complexity I • Archetypus detection means to identify the origin of a thought or a chunk of text (or at least the earliest occurrence). • Sentiment (Acceptance) detection means if a text passage is re-used in a „positive“ or „negative“ way An example: • German: „Gleich und gleich gesellt sich gern.“ • Englisch: „Like will to like.“ „Birds of a feather flock together.“ (“to bring like and like together”) Question: How would/do you use this phrase regarding sentiments in your daily life? Marco Büchler 46 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Complexity II Hom. Od. 17 215-219: As he saw them, he spoke and addressed them, and reviled them in terrible and unseemly words, and stirred the heart of Odysseus: “Lo, now, in very truth the vile leads the vile. As ever, the god is bringing like and like together. Whither, pray, art thou leading this filthy wretch,1 thou miserable swineherd, ... Marco Büchler 47 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Complexity III • German phrase: „jemanden auf's Dach steigen“ • English (literally translated): „to climb onto someone's roof“ • English (semantically translated): „to put someone down“, „tell someone off“ • Understanding the example: – Goes back to a German tradition between 7th and 12th century – Young men went onto other's (and not following the rules of the community ) roof in order to remove it. – Happened especially during (German) carnival and Shrove Tuesday – There was no legal rule about it ... – ... in early Middle-ages, however, this became fundamental part of early adaptions of constitutions Marco Büchler 48 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Complexity III The home is invoilable. Article 13 of the recent German constitution Focus here: Constitution evolution task in different societies. Marco Büchler 49 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Complexity IV Article 13: The home is invoilable. vs. judgement to online observation by federal institutions in context of terrorism ... Das Schutzgut dieses Grundrechts ist die räumliche Sphäre, in der sich das Privatleben entfaltet [...]. Neben Privatwohnungen fallen auch Betriebs- und Geschäftsräume in den Schutzbereich des Art. 13 GG [...]. Dabei erschöpft sich der Grundrechtsschutz nicht in der Abwehr eines körperlichen Eindringens in die Wohnung. Als Eingriff in Art. 13 GG sind auch Maßnahmen anzusehen, durch die staatliche Stellen sich mit besonderen Hilfsmitteln einen Einblick in Vorgänge innerhalb der Wohnung verschaffen, die der natürlichen Wahrnehmung von außerhalb des geschützten Bereichs entzogen sind. Dazu gehören nicht nur die akustische oder optische Wohnraumüberwachung [...], sondern ebenfalls etwa die Messung elektromagnetischer Abstrahlungen, mit der die Nutzung eines informationstechnischen Systems in der Wohnung überwacht werden kann. Das kann auch ein System betreffen, das offline arbeitet. ... Decision about online observation by the German government Source: http://www.bundesverfassungsgericht.de/entscheidungen/rs20080227_1bvr037007.html Marco Büchler 50 „ACID for the eHumanities“: Complexity of text re-use research Marco Büchler 51 Complex tasks do strongly need collaborations! Google group for Historical Text Re-use: http://groups.google.com/group/historical-text-re-use Marco Büchler 52 Summary Scope of ULEI's subproject Who is involved? ACID for the eHumanities as paradigm for successful projects From mission to vision Marco Büchler 53 eTRACES/ASV: 'The team' Gerhard Heyer Marco Büchler Maria Moritz Petra Gamrath Christian Kötteritzsch Frederik Baumgardt Thomas Efer Marco Büchler 54