Traversing News with Second Order Swarm Intelligence

David MS Rodrigues Reading the News Through its Structure New Hybrid Connectivity Based Approaches

Figure – Two simplicies a and b connected by the 2-dimensional face, the triangle {1;2;3}. In the analysis of the time-line of The Guardian newspaper (link) the system used feature vectors based on frequency of words and them computed similarity between documents based on those feature vectors. This is a purely statistical approach that requires great computational power and that is difficult for problems that have large feature vectors and many documents. Feature vectors with 100,000 or more items are common and computing similarities between these documents becomes cumbersome. Instead of computing distance (or similarity) matrices between documents from feature vectors, the present approach explores the possibility of inferring the distance between documents from the Q-analysis description. Q-analysis is a very natural notion of connectivity between the simplicies of the structure and in the relation studied, documents are connected to each other through shared sets of tags entered by the journalists. Also in this framework, eccentricity is defined as a measure of the relatedness of one simplex in relation to another [7].

David M.S. Rodrigues and Vitorino Ramos, “Traversing News with Ant Colony Optimisation and Negative Pheromones” [PDF], accepted as preprint for oral presentation at the European Conference on Complex SystemsECCS14 in Lucca, Sept. 22-26, 2014, Italy.

Abstract: The past decade has seen the rapid development of the online newsroom. News published online are the main outlet of news surpassing traditional printed newspapers. This poses challenges to the production and to the consumption of those news. With those many sources of information available it is important to find ways to cluster and organise the documents if one wants to understand this new system. Traditional approaches to the problem of clustering documents usually embed the documents in a suitable similarity space. Previous studies have reported on the impact of the similarity measures used for clustering of textual corpora [1]. These similarity measures usually are calculated for bag of words representations of the documents. This makes the final document-word matrix high dimensional. Feature vectors with more than 10,000 dimensions are common and algorithms have severe problems with the high dimensionality of the data. A novel bio inspired approach to the problem of traversing the news is presented. It finds Hamiltonian cycles over documents published by the newspaper The Guardian. A Second Order Swarm Intelligence algorithm based on Ant Colony Optimisation was developed [2, 3] that uses a negative pheromone to mark unrewarding paths with a “no-entry” signal. This approach follows recent findings of negative pheromone usage in real ants [4].

In this case study the corpus of data is represented as a bipartite relation between documents and keywords entered by the journalists to characterise the news. A new similarity measure between documents is presented based on the Q-analysis description [5, 6, 7] of the simplicial complex formed between documents and keywords. The eccentricity between documents (two simplicies) is then used as a novel measure of similarity between documents. The results prove that the Second Order Swarm Intelligence algorithm performs better in benchmark problems of the travelling salesman problem, with faster convergence and optimal results. The addition of the negative pheromone as a non-entry signal improves the quality of the results. The application of the algorithm to the corpus of news of The Guardian creates a coherent navigation system among the news. This allows the users to navigate the news published during a certain period of time in a semantic sequence instead of a time sequence. This work as broader application as it can be applied to many cases where the data is mapped to bipartite relations (e.g. protein expressions in cells, sentiment analysis, brand awareness in social media, routing problems), as it highlights the connectivity of the underlying complex system.

Keywords: Self-Organization, Stigmergy, Co-Evolution, Swarm Intelligence, Dynamic Optimization, Foraging, Cooperative Learning, Hamiltonian cycles, Text Mining, Textual Corpora, Information Retrieval, Knowledge Discovery, Sentiment Analysis, Q-Analysis, Data Mining, Journalism, The Guardian.

References:

[1] Alexander Strehl, Joydeep Ghosh, and Raymond Mooney. Impact of similarity measures on web-page clustering. In Workshop on Artifcial Intelligence for Web Search (AAAI 2000), pages 58-64, 2000.

[2] David M. S. Rodrigues, Jorge Louçã, and Vitorino Ramos. From standard to second-order Swarm Intelligence phase-space maps. In Stefan Thurner, editor, 8th European Conference on Complex Systems, Vienna, Austria, 9 2011.

[3] Vitorino Ramos, David M. S. Rodrigues, and Jorge Louçã. Second order Swarm Intelligence. In Jeng-Shyang Pan, Marios M. Polycarpou, Michael Wozniak, André C.P.L.F. Carvalho, Hector Quintian, and Emilio Corchado, editors, HAIS’13. 8th International Conference on Hybrid Artificial Intelligence Systems, volume 8073 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pages 411-420. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, Salamanca, Spain, 9 2013.

[4] Elva J.H. Robinson, Duncan Jackson, Mike Holcombe, and Francis L.W. Ratnieks. No entry signal in ant foraging (hymenoptera: Formicidae): new insights from an agent-based model. Myrmecological News, 10(120), 2007.

[5] Ronald Harry Atkin. Mathematical Structure in Human Affairs. Heinemann Educational Publishers, 48 Charles Street, London, 1 edition, 1974.

[6] J. H. Johnson. A survey of Q-analysis, part 1: The past and present. In Proceedings of the Seminar on Q-analysis and the Social Sciences, Universty of Leeds, 9 1983.

[7] David M. S. Rodrigues. Identifying news clusters using Q-analysis and modularity. In Albert Diaz-Guilera, Alex Arenas, and Alvaro Corral, editors, Proceedings of the European Conference on Complex Systems 2013, Barcelona, 9 2013.

O Expresso Diário

O Expresso decidiu lançar um jornal novo, diário e vespertino. A verdade é que não passa de um embuste para cobrar mais por conteúdos, que são todos chamados a partir de uma app em JavaScript de forma a que os motores de busca os não possam ler e dessa forma não os possam indexar. A app não tem um fallback para browsers de texto ou sem Javascript e retirando-lhe a folha de estilos verifica-se uma total ignorância da hierarquia semântica que uma página web deve ter.

De uma só penada o Expresso Diário quer criar uma paywall, ignorar a existência de um mundo exterior ao do grupo Impresa, ignorar as práticas da WWW (porventura pretende até reinventar uma à sua medida), fechar-se num silo, e conseguir ainda por cima cobrar por isso (PARECE A APPLE, NÃO?).

A ideia do vespertino é algo que qualquer outro jornal pode fazer. Imaginem outro jornal com tradição e experiência na publicação diária a publicar o “Jornal das 6” com os conteúdos curados ao longo do dia para fazer uma edição coerente do que mais importante aconteceu? Não dá muito trabalho e certamente seria um local de eleição para ler as notícias no fim de um dia de trabalho! (Ah, esperem, é por isso que existem feeds RSS e sites como o scoop.it e afins).

Mas num qualquer jornal que queira ir mais longe, pode até ter um processo editorial baseado em padrões de conectividade das notícias e no comportamento dos utilizadores ao longo do dia (Eu até fiz um doutoramento sobre o assunto, pelo que não deve ser muito difícil). E a partir desses padrões de connectividade fazer um jornal semi-curado que uma pequena equipa acabaria de editar.

Mas esperem, se calhar em vez de vespertino até podiam fazer um jornal vespertino, mas a todas as horas? Ou todos os minutos? Bem, se calhar é isso mesmo que os jornais online são agora. Faltará talvez a parte do processo de curar o conteúdo de forma mais coerente.

Mas mais uma vez o que falta mesmo é alguém querer fazê-lo (e ter coragem para) sem levantar mais uma paywall, criar silos de conteúdos e quebrar princípios básicos de funcionamento de um mundo conectado da qual a internet depende.

Bem, oportunidade perdida, MOVE ON.

Grafo do conhecimento do Google

Cada vez mais a indústria percebe que mais importante que os directórios de informação (Yahoo), é preciso estabelecer relações entre os dados que se acumulam. As relações sob a forma de gráfos, (p.ex Q-analysis) está a revolucionar a forma como a indústria está a alterar os seus produtos. Agora o Google pretende mudar o paradigma da empresa passando de um serviço de procura para um serviço de conhecimento. Esperemos que isto não seja apenas mais um dos muitos projectos que ao fim de algum tempo é engavetado.