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Institution

Istituto di Scienza e Tecnologie dell'Informazione

FacilityPisa, Italy
About: Istituto di Scienza e Tecnologie dell'Informazione is a facility organization based out in Pisa, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: User interface & Model checking. The organization has 600 authors who have published 2660 publications receiving 64489 citations. The organization is also known as: ISTI & Istituto di Scienza e Tecnologie dell'Informazione "Alessandro Faedo".


Papers
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Proceedings Article
01 May 2010
TL;DR: This work discusses SENTIWORDNET 3.0, a lexical resource explicitly devised for supporting sentiment classification and opinion mining applications, and reports on the improvements concerning aspect (b) that it embodies with respect to version 1.0.
Abstract: In this work we present SENTIWORDNET 30, a lexical resource explicitly devised for supporting sentiment classification and opinion mining applications SENTIWORDNET 30 is an improved version of SENTIWORDNET 10, a lexical resource publicly available for research purposes, now currently licensed to more than 300 research groups and used in a variety of research projects worldwide Both SENTIWORDNET 10 and 30 are the result of automatically annotating all WORDNET synsets according to their degrees of positivity, negativity, and neutrality SENTIWORDNET 10 and 30 differ (a) in the versions of WORDNET which they annotate (WORDNET 20 and 30, respectively), (b) in the algorithm used for automatically annotating WORDNET, which now includes (additionally to the previous semi-supervised learning step) a random-walk step for refining the scores We here discuss SENTIWORDNET 30, especially focussing on the improvements concerning aspect (b) that it embodies with respect to version 10 We also report the results of evaluating SENTIWORDNET 30 against a fragment of WORDNET 30 manually annotated for positivity, negativity, and neutrality; these results indicate accuracy improvements of about 20% with respect to SENTIWORDNET 10

2,870 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a classification of the main problems addressed in the literature with respect to the notion of explanation and the type of black box decision support systems, given a problem definition, a black box type, and a desired explanation, this survey should help the researcher to find the proposals more useful for his own work.
Abstract: In recent years, many accurate decision support systems have been constructed as black boxes, that is as systems that hide their internal logic to the user. This lack of explanation constitutes both a practical and an ethical issue. The literature reports many approaches aimed at overcoming this crucial weakness, sometimes at the cost of sacrificing accuracy for interpretability. The applications in which black box decision systems can be used are various, and each approach is typically developed to provide a solution for a specific problem and, as a consequence, it explicitly or implicitly delineates its own definition of interpretability and explanation. The aim of this article is to provide a classification of the main problems addressed in the literature with respect to the notion of explanation and the type of black box system. Given a problem definition, a black box type, and a desired explanation, this survey should help the researcher to find the proposals more useful for his own work. The proposed classification of approaches to open black box models should also be useful for putting the many research open questions in perspective.

2,805 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Peter A. R. Ade1, Nabila Aghanim2, M. I. R. Alves2, C. Armitage-Caplan3  +469 moreInstitutions (89)
TL;DR: The European Space Agency's Planck satellite, dedicated to studying the early Universe and its subsequent evolution, was launched 14 May 2009 and has been scanning the microwave and submillimetre sky continuously since 12 August 2009 as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The European Space Agency’s Planck satellite, dedicated to studying the early Universe and its subsequent evolution, was launched 14 May 2009 and has been scanning the microwave and submillimetre sky continuously since 12 August 2009. In March 2013, ESA and the Planck Collaboration released the initial cosmology products based on the first 15.5 months of Planck data, along with a set of scientific and technical papers and a web-based explanatory supplement. This paper gives an overview of the mission and its performance, the processing, analysis, and characteristics of the data, the scientific results, and the science data products and papers in the release. The science products include maps of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and diffuse extragalactic foregrounds, a catalogue of compact Galactic and extragalactic sources, and a list of sources detected through the Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect. The likelihood code used to assess cosmological models against the Planck data and a lensing likelihood are described. Scientific results include robust support for the standard six-parameter ΛCDM model of cosmology and improved measurements of its parameters, including a highly significant deviation from scale invariance of the primordial power spectrum. The Planck values for these parameters and others derived from them are significantly different from those previously determined. Several large-scale anomalies in the temperature distribution of the CMB, first detected by WMAP, are confirmed with higher confidence. Planck sets new limits on the number and mass of neutrinos, and has measured gravitational lensing of CMB anisotropies at greater than 25σ. Planck finds no evidence for non-Gaussianity in the CMB. Planck’s results agree well with results from the measurements of baryon acoustic oscillations. Planck finds a lower Hubble constant than found in some more local measures. Some tension is also present between the amplitude of matter fluctuations (σ8) derived from CMB data and that derived from Sunyaev-Zeldovich data. The Planck and WMAP power spectra are offset from each other by an average level of about 2% around the first acoustic peak. Analysis of Planck polarization data is not yet mature, therefore polarization results are not released, although the robust detection of E-mode polarization around CMB hot and cold spots is shown graphically.

1,719 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings suggest that contacts predicted by DCA can be used as a reliable guide to facilitate computational predictions of alternative protein conformations, protein complex formation, and even the de novo prediction of protein domain structures, contingent on the existence of a large number of homologous sequences which are being rapidly made available due to advances in genome sequencing.
Abstract: The similarity in the three-dimensional structures of homologous proteins imposes strong constraints on their sequence variability. It has long been suggested that the resulting correlations among amino acid compositions at different sequence positions can be exploited to infer spatial contacts within the tertiary protein structure. Crucial to this inference is the ability to disentangle direct and indirect correlations, as accomplished by the recently introduced direct-coupling analysis (DCA). Here we develop a computationally efficient implementation of DCA, which allows us to evaluate the accuracy of contact prediction by DCA for a large number of protein domains, based purely on sequence information. DCA is shown to yield a large number of correctly predicted contacts, recapitulating the global structure of the contact map for the majority of the protein domains examined. Furthermore, our analysis captures clear signals beyond intradomain residue contacts, arising, e.g., from alternative protein conformations, ligand-mediated residue couplings, and interdomain interactions in protein oligomers. Our findings suggest that contacts predicted by DCA can be used as a reliable guide to facilitate computational predictions of alternative protein conformations, protein complex formation, and even the de novo prediction of protein domain structures, contingent on the existence of a large number of homologous sequences which are being rapidly made available due to advances in genome sequencing.

1,319 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
12 Aug 2007
TL;DR: This paper develops an extension of the sequential pattern mining paradigm that analyzes the trajectories of moving objects and introduces trajectory patterns as concise descriptions of frequent behaviours in terms of both space and time.
Abstract: The increasing pervasiveness of location-acquisition technologies (GPS, GSM networks, etc.) is leading to the collection of large spatio-temporal datasets and to the opportunity of discovering usable knowledge about movement behaviour, which fosters novel applications and services. In this paper, we move towards this direction and develop an extension of the sequential pattern mining paradigm that analyzes the trajectories of moving objects. We introduce trajectory patterns as concise descriptions of frequent behaviours, in terms of both space (i.e., the regions of space visited during movements) and time (i.e., the duration of movements). In this setting, we provide a general formal statement of the novel mining problem and then study several different instantiations of different complexity. The various approaches are then empirically evaluated over real data and synthetic benchmarks, comparing their strengths and weaknesses.

1,099 citations


Authors

Showing all 633 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Raj Mittra79144429317
D. Lucchesi6559118057
Alessandro Rossi6142214054
Francesco Bonchi5526311373
Giovanni Zanchetta552508627
Dino Pedreschi5329913040
Paolo Cignoni5219611529
Roberto Scopigno5226310076
Alessandro Fortunelli472779080
Umberto Straccia472098186
Vincenzo Palleschi462638960
William H. Sanders463438930
Fabio Paternò463459845
Joaquim Garrabou451386425
Ennio Arimondo432799783
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202318
202234
2021138
2020173
2019181
2018155