PhD defence by Lucas Chavez Lima

Lucas Chavez Limas PhD Defence

Title

Semantic Classification and Evaluation

Summary

This thesis presents a collection of research articles that make contributions in the area of semantic classification and evaluation. Semantic classification describes the automatic processing of data, such as text, by machines, with the goal of simulating “understanding” the intended semantics, and as a result of this making a decision, for instance about the topic being discussed, or how some text should be translated into another language, or whether some piece of information constitutes fake news. This area has seen tremendous development in recent years, especially with the wide spread use of artificial neural network architectures, practically leading to almost human-like performance. This thesis presents a series of contributions in the design of artificial neural network architectures that: 1) can capture with high accuracy the most salient parts of text, in terms of syntax, semantics and grammar; 2) can capture semantic compositionality accurately; and 3) that can accurately detect fake news using different types of supporting evidence. This thesis also presents a series of contributions in how text processing is evaluated. Specifically, this thesis presents: 1) a family of novel evaluation measures that can evaluate rankings with respect to several aspects, such as relevance, and credibility and usefulness; 2) the biggest to this day evaluation dataset for fake news classification; and 3) a method for improving the evaluation capacity of incomplete evaluation datasets. Collectively, the above contributions advance the state of the art in how machines process and understand text.

Assessment Committee

  • Associate Professor, Daniel Spikol (Head of Committee, DIKU UCPH) 
  • Professor, Fabio Crestani, University of Lugano, Switzerland
  • Associate Professor, Ingo Frommholz, University of Wolverhampton, Unites Kingdom

Academic supervisor

  • Professor, Jakob Grue Simonsen, Department of Computer Science, University of Copenhagen
  • Professor, Christina Lioma, Department of Computer Science, University of Copenhagen
  • Assistant Professor, Maria Maistro, Department of Computer Science, University of Copenhagen

Moderator at this defense will be

Assistant Professor, Sadegh Talebi, Department of Computer Science,
University of Copenhagen.


For an electronic copy of the thesis, please go to our PhD page