Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148

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  • Conference Object
    Quote Detection: a New Task and Dataset for Nlp
    (Association for Computational Linguistics, 2023) Tekir, S.; Güzel, A.; Tenekeci, S.; Haman, B.U.
    Quotes are universally appealing. Humans recognize good quotes and save them for later reference. However, it may pose a challenge for machines. In this work, we build a new corpus of quotes and propose a new task, quote detection, as a type of span detection. We retrieve the quote set from Goodreads and collect the spans through a custom search on the Gutenberg Book Corpus. We run two types of baselines for quote detection: Conditional random field (CRF) and summarization with pointer-generator networks and Bidirectional and Auto-Regressive Transformers (BART). The results show that the neural sequence-to-sequence models perform substantially better than CRF. From the viewpoint of neural extractive summarization, quote detection seems easier than news summarization. Moreover, model fine-tuning on our corpus and the Cornell Movie-Quotes Corpus introduces incremental performance boosts. Finally, we provide a qualitative analysis to gain insight into the performance. © 2023 Association for Computational Linguistics.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 69
    Citation - Scopus: 89
    Joint Optimization for Object Class Segmentation and Dense Stereo Reconstruction
    (Springer Verlag, 2012) Ladicky, Lubor; Sturgess, Paul; Russell, Chris; Sengupta, Sunando; Baştanlar, Yalın; Clocksin, William; Torr, Philip H.S.
    The problems of dense stereo reconstruction and object class segmentation can both be formulated as Random Field labeling problems, in which every pixel in the image is assigned a label corresponding to either its disparity, or an object class such as road or building. While these two problems are mutually informative, no attempt has been made to jointly optimize their labelings. In this work we provide a flexible framework configured via cross-validation that unifies the two problems and demonstrate that, by resolving ambiguities, which would be present in real world data if the two problems were considered separately, joint optimization of the two problems substantially improves performance. To evaluate our method, we augment the Leu-ven data set (http://cms.brookes.ac.uk/research/visiongroup/ files/Leuven.zip), which is a stereo video shot from a car driving around the streets of Leuven, with 70 hand labeled object class and disparity maps. We hope that the release of these annotations will stimulate further work in the challenging domain of street-view analysis. Complete source code is publicly available (http://cms.brookes.ac.uk/ staff/Philip-Torr/ale.htm). © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.