Failure diagnosis with incomplete information in cable networks
Yun Mao, Hani Jamjoom, et al.
CoNEXT 2006
We describe the results of extensive experiments using optimized rule-based induction methods on large document collections. The goal of these methods is to discover automatically classification patterns that can be used for general document categorization or personalized filtering of free text. Previous reports indicate that human-engineered rule-based systems, requiring many man-years of developmental efforts, have been successfully built to “read” documents and assign topics to them. We show that machine-generated decision rules appear comparable to human performance, while using the identical rule-based representation. In comparison with other machine-learning techniques, results on a key benchmark from the Reuters collection show a large gain in performance, from a previously reported 67% recall/precision breakeven point to 80.5%. In the context of a very high-dimensional feature space, several methodological alternatives are examined, including universal versus local dictionaries, and binary versus frequency-related features. © 1994, ACM. All rights reserved.
Yun Mao, Hani Jamjoom, et al.
CoNEXT 2006
Pradip Bose
VTS 1998
Michael C. McCord, Violetta Cavalli-Sforza
ACL 2007
Fan Zhang, Junwei Cao, et al.
IEEE TETC