National Repository of Grey Literature 24 records found  beginprevious21 - 24  jump to record: Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Entity Relationship Extraction
Šimečková, Zuzana ; Straka, Milan (advisor) ; Straňák, Pavel (referee)
Relationship extraction is the task of extracting semantic relationships between en- tities from a text. We create a Czech Relationship Extraction Dataset (CERED) using distant supervision on Wikidata and Czech Wikipedia. We detail the methodology we used and the pitfalls we encountered. Then we use CERED to fine-tune a neural network model for relationship extraction. We base our model on BERT - a linguistic model pre-trained on extensive unlabeled data. We demonstrate that our model performs well on existing English relationship datasets (Semeval 2010 Task 8, TACRED) and report the results we achieved on CERED. 1
Classification of Relations between Named Entities in Text
Ondřej, Karel ; Doležal, Jan (referee) ; Smrž, Pavel (advisor)
This master thesis deals with the extraction of relationships between named entities in the text. In the theoretical part of the thesis, the issue of natural language representation for machine processing is discussed. Subsequently, two partial tasks of relationship extraction are defined, namely named entities recognition and classification of relationships between them, including a summary of state-of-the-art solutions. In the practical part of the thesis, system for automatic extraction of relationships between named entities from downloaded pages is designed. The classification of relationships between entities is based on the pre-trained transformers. In this thesis, four pre-trained transformers are compared, namely BERT, XLNet, RoBERTa and ALBERT.
Email spam filtering using artificial intelligence
Safonov, Yehor ; Uher, Václav (referee) ; Kolařík, Martin (advisor)
In the modern world, email communication defines itself as the most used technology for exchanging messages between users. It is based on three pillars which contribute to the popularity and stimulate its rapid growth. These pillars are represented by free availability, efficiency and intuitiveness during exchange of information. All of them constitute a significant advantage in the provision of communication services. On the other hand, the growing popularity of email technologies poses considerable security risks and transforms them into an universal tool for spreading unsolicited content. Potential attacks may be aimed at either a specific endpoints or whole computer infrastructures. Despite achieving high accuracy during spam filtering, traditional techniques do not often catch up to rapid growth and evolution of spam techniques. These approaches are affected by overfitting issues, converging into a poor local minimum, inefficiency in highdimensional data processing and have long-term maintainability issues. One of the main goals of this master's thesis is to develop and train deep neural networks using the latest machine learning techniques for successfully solving text-based spam classification problem belonging to the Natural Language Processing (NLP) domain. From a theoretical point of view, the master's thesis is focused on the e-mail communication area with an emphasis on spam filtering. Next parts of the thesis bring attention to the domain of machine learning and artificial neural networks, discuss principles of their operations and basic properties. The theoretical part also covers possible ways of applying described techniques to the area of text analysis and solving NLP. One of the key aspects of the study lies in a detailed comparison of current machine learning methods, their specifics and accuracy when applied to spam filtering. At the beginning of the practical part, focus will be placed on the e-mail dataset processing. This phase was divided into five stages with the motivation of maintaining key features of the raw data and increasing the final quality of the dataset. The created dataset was used for training, testing and validation of types of the chosen deep neural networks. Selected models ULMFiT, BERT and XLNet have been successfully implemented. The master's thesis includes a description of the final data adaptation, neural networks learning process, their testing and validation. In the end of the work, the implemented models are compared using a confusion matrix and possible improvements and concise conclusion are also outlined.
The Perception of Speed and Emotional Response in Intensely Visualized Progress Indicators
Pilát, Peter ; Herout, Adam (referee) ; Beran, Vítězslav (advisor)
This paper deals with designing, implementing and testing of progress indicators. Indicators are specific and visually different. It discusses analogies with current indicators and their principles. There are listed hypotheses affecting the quality of indicators. It studies speed comparisons and emotion responses of the new designs with the help of test application which collects the results from bigger amount of participants. The results are processed and analyzed at the end of this paper.

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