Institution
International Institute of Information Technology, Hyderabad
Education•Hyderabad, India•
About: International Institute of Information Technology, Hyderabad is a education organization based out in Hyderabad, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Computer science & Authentication. The organization has 2048 authors who have published 3677 publications receiving 45319 citations. The organization is also known as: IIIT Hyderabad & International Institute of Information Technology (IIIT).
Topics: Computer science, Authentication, Deep learning, Artificial neural network, Internet security
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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07 Aug 2009TL;DR: The results show the popular phrase-based SMT techniques can be successfully used for the task of machine transliteration, for English-Hindi language pair.
Abstract: In this paper we use the popular phrase-based SMT techniques for the task of machine transliteration, for English-Hindi language pair. Minimum error rate training has been used to learn the model weights. We have achieved an accuracy of 46.3% on the test set. Our results show these techniques can be successfully used for the task of machine transliteration.
39 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown that multi-frequency SBL can significantly reduce spatial aliasing and is shown to outperform ULA in root mean squared error for single frequency beamforming.
Abstract: Sparse linear arrays such as co-prime and nested arrays can resolve more sources than the number of sensors. In contrast, uniform linear arrays (ULA) cannot resolve more sources than the number of sensors. This paper demonstrates this using Sparse Bayesian learning (SBL) and co-array MUSIC for single frequency beamforming. For approximately the same number of sensors, co-prime and nested arrays are shown to outperform ULA in root mean squared error. This paper shows that multi-frequency SBL can significantly reduce spatial aliasing. The effects of different sparse sub-arrays on SBL performance are compared qualitatively using the Noise Correlation 2009 experimental data set.
39 citations
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TL;DR: A novel method for localizing cysts in 3-D OCT volumes by inducing motion to a given OCT slice, based on selective enhancement of the cysts, which has the highest performance on all the benchmarks.
Abstract: Automated and accurate segmentation of cystoid structures in Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) is of interest in the early detection of retinal diseases. It is, however, a challenging task. We propose a novel method for localizing cysts in 3D OCT volumes. The proposed work is biologically inspired and based on selective enhancement of the cysts, by inducing motion to a given OCT slice. A Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) is designed to learn a mapping function that combines the result of multiple such motions to produce a probability map for cyst locations in a given slice. The final segmentation of cysts is obtained via simple clustering of the detected cyst locations. The proposed method is evaluated on two public datasets and one private dataset. The public datasets include the one released for the OPTIMA Cyst segmentation challenge (OCSC) in MICCAI 2015 and the DME dataset. After training on the OCSC train set, the method achieves a mean Dice Coefficient (DC) of 0.71 on the OCSC test set. The robustness of the algorithm was examined by cross-validation on the DME and AEI (private) datasets and a mean DC values obtained were 0.69 and 0.79, respectively. Overall, the proposed system outperforms all benchmarks. These results underscore the strengths of the proposed method in handling variations in both data acquisition protocols and scanners.
39 citations
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TL;DR: A neural solution for this multi-label classification of sexism of any kind(s) is developed that can combine sentence representations obtained using models such as BERT with distributional and linguistic word embeddings using a flexible, hierarchical architecture involving recurrent components and optional convolutional ones.
Abstract: Sexism, an injustice that subjects women and girls to enormous suffering, manifests in blatant as well as subtle ways. In the wake of growing documentation of experiences of sexism on the web, the automatic categorization of accounts of sexism has the potential to assist social scientists and policy makers in studying and countering sexism better. The existing work on sexism classification, which is different from sexism detection, has certain limitations in terms of the categories of sexism used and/or whether they can co-occur. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work on the multi-label classification of sexism of any kind(s), and we contribute the largest dataset for sexism categorization. We develop a neural solution for this multi-label classification that can combine sentence representations obtained using models such as BERT with distributional and linguistic word embeddings using a flexible, hierarchical architecture involving recurrent components and optional convolutional ones. Further, we leverage unlabeled accounts of sexism to infuse domain-specific elements into our framework. The best proposed method outperforms several deep learning as well as traditional machine learning baselines by an appreciable margin.
39 citations
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08 Jul 2012TL;DR: This work shows how to predict what the learning curve would look like if the authors were to manually translate increasing amounts of data and proposes methods for predicting learning curves in both these scenarios.
Abstract: Parallel data in the domain of interest is the key resource when training a statistical machine translation (SMT) system for a specific purpose. Since ad-hoc manual translation can represent a significant investment in time and money, a prior assesment of the amount of training data required to achieve a satisfactory accuracy level can be very useful. In this work, we show how to predict what the learning curve would look like if we were to manually translate increasing amounts of data.
We consider two scenarios, 1) Monolingual samples in the source and target languages are available and 2) An additional small amount of parallel corpus is also available. We propose methods for predicting learning curves in both these scenarios.
39 citations
Authors
Showing all 2066 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Ravi Shankar | 66 | 672 | 19326 |
Joakim Nivre | 61 | 295 | 17203 |
Aravind K. Joshi | 59 | 249 | 16417 |
Ashok Kumar Das | 56 | 278 | 9166 |
Malcolm F. White | 55 | 172 | 10762 |
B. Yegnanarayana | 54 | 340 | 12861 |
Ram Bilas Pachori | 48 | 182 | 8140 |
C. V. Jawahar | 45 | 479 | 9582 |
Saurabh Garg | 40 | 206 | 6738 |
Himanshu Thapliyal | 36 | 201 | 3992 |
Monika Sharma | 36 | 238 | 4412 |
Ponnurangam Kumaraguru | 33 | 269 | 6849 |
Abhijit Mitra | 33 | 240 | 7795 |
Ramanathan Sowdhamini | 33 | 256 | 4458 |
Helmut Schiessel | 32 | 117 | 3527 |