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Udo Hahn

ECML PKDD 2008 European Conference on Machine Learning and Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases Workshop on High-Level Information Extraction 15-19 September, Antwerp, Belgium.

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Udo Hahn

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  1. ECML PKDD 2008 European Conference on Machine Learning and Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases Workshop on High-Level Information Extraction 15-19 September, Antwerp, Belgium What‘s an Event ?How Ontologies and Linguistic Semantics Shape Upcoming Challenges for Machine Learning Models of Event Extraction Udo Hahn Jena University Language and Information Engineering (JULIE) Lab www.julielab.de

  2. John Doe: [category = person] citizenship = United States origin = Iran relative = father … father: [category = person] residence = Iran event = traveled arg0 = he (John Doe) arg1= Gaza frequency = 6 times duration = the last year Relations, Events, Semantic Roles,.. SemEval TDT ACE Narrative Report: John Doe is a naturalized United States citizen from Iran. His immediate family (father, mother and two sisters) still live in Iran. … He has traveled to Gaza 6x w/in the last year.

  3. Relational Knowledge Types • Representation of Static Knowledge („invariable“ states, are there any ??? ) • Conceptual: Is-a, Instance-of • Conceptual: Part-of • Attributive (properties, binary relations): • located-in, citizen-of, has-socialsecurityno, ... • Representation of Dynamic Knowledge (state changes, dependencies among states) • processes, actions, events • sales, rating changes, transports, launches, mergers & acquisitions, kidnappings, …

  4. Hand Washing as an Event

  5. Hand Washing Event (1/2) • http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/hand-washing/HQ00407 • Hand washing: A simple way to prevent infection • Hand washing is a simple habit that can help keep you healthy. Learn about the benefits of good hand hygiene, as well as when to wash your hands and how to clean them properly. • Hand washing is a simple habit — one that requires minimal training and no special equipment. Yet it's one of the best ways to avoid getting sick. This simple habit requires only soap and warm water or an alcohol-based hand sanitizer — a cleanser that doesn't require water. Do you know the benefits of good hand hygiene and when and how to wash your hands properly?

  6. Hand Washing Event (2/2) • Proper hand-washing techniques • Good hand-washing techniques include washing your hands with soap and water or using an alcohol-based hand sanitizer. Antimicrobial wipes or towelettes are just as effective as soap and water in cleaning your hands but aren't as good as alcohol-based sanitizers. • Antibacterial soaps have become increasingly popular in recent years. However, these soaps are no more effective at killing germs than are regular soap and water. Using these soaps may lead to the development of bacteria that are resistant to the products' antimicrobial agents — making it even harder to kill these germs in the future. In general, regular soap is fine. The combination of scrubbing your hands with soap — antibacterial or not — and rinsing them with water loosens and removes bacteria from your hands. • Proper hand washing with soap and waterFollow these instructions for washing with soap and water: • Wet your hands with warm, running water and apply liquid or clean bar soap. Lather well. • Rub your hands vigorously together for at least 15 seconds. • Scrub all surfaces, including the backs of your hands, wrists, between your fingers and under your fingernails. • Rinse well. • Dry your hands with a clean or disposable towel. • Use a towel to turn off the faucet. • Proper use of an alcohol-based hand sanitizerAlcohol-based hand sanitizers — which don't require water — are an excellent alternative to hand washing, particularly when soap and water aren't available. They're actually more effective than soap and water in killing bacteria and viruses that cause disease. Commercially prepared hand sanitizers contain ingredients that help prevent skin dryness. Using these products can result in less skin dryness and irritation than hand washing. • Not all hand sanitizers are created equal, though. Some "waterless" hand sanitizers don't contain alcohol. Use only the alcohol-based products. • To use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer: • Apply about 1/2 tsp of the product to the palm of your hand. • Rub your hands together, covering all surfaces of your hands, until they're dry. • If your hands are visibly dirty, however, wash with soap and water rather than a sanitizer.

  7. ECML PKDD 2008 European Conference on Machine Learning and Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases Workshop on High-Level Information Extraction 15-19 September, Antwerp, Belgium What‘s Hand Washing?How Mayo Clinic Guidelines Shape Upcoming Challenges for Machine Learning Models of Event Extraction Udo Hahn Jena University Language and Information Engineering (JULIE) Lab www.julielab.de

  8. Approaches to Event Modeling • Events as entities • Events as flat relations • Features for flat events • Decomposition into subevents • Interleaving of subevents • Hard-wired ordinal connectivity • Triggered connectivity (e.g., via integrity constraints, inference rules, etc.) • Scripting for connectivity

  9. Events as Entitiesunary relations ... • Issues: • just ‚naming‘ of a relation (variant of ER) • no interrelations between any arguments HandWashing

  10. Flat EventsYet another breed of n-ary relations ... • Issues: • Are there ‚core‘ arguments (complement/adjunct)? • How many arguments (it‘s endless!)? • Type checking/compatibility HandWashing( Agent, Patient, Instruments, InState, OutState, ...)

  11. A remark on type constraints ...

  12. Features for Flat Events • HandWashing( Agent, Patient, • Instruments, InState, OutState, ...) • Telicity: +/- (is there a point of completion ?) • Aspectuality: n („I swim“ vs. „I am swimming“) • Tense: n (location on time axis: • past, now, future, …) • Issues: • Classifies verbs, ..., use for inferences? • Classifies knowledge states (ongoing, result) – [the] splicing, [I am] splicing, [I] spliced, …

  13. Hand Washing as a Complex Activity

  14. Decomposition into Subevents HandWashing( ...) • Issues: • Abstraction between event cover and subevents • Subevent granularity • Subevent reusability • Completeness required ? • Or are there mandatory vs. optional subevents ? • Or are probabilities associated with subevents ? • Relevant vs. irrelevant intermediate steps • the latter are often skipped in event descriptions Wet-w-Water( ... ) RubHands( ...) Dry-w-Towel( ...) ApplySoap( ... ) Rinse( ...)

  15. Interleaving of SubeventsHard-wired Ordinal Connectivity HandWashing( ...) • Issues: • Orderings everywhere? • Strict vs. partial • Linear vs. parallel • Many orderings?: Defaults vs. exceptions 1. Wet-w-Water( ... ) 3. RubHands( ...) 5. Dry-w-Towel( ...) 2. ApplySoap( ... ) 4. Rinse( ...)

  16. Interleaving of SubeventsTriggered Connectivity (ICs, Rules) HandWashing( ...) C • Issues: • Formal reasoning required • IC checker • Inference engine • How many relevant ICs/rules are there? Wet-w-Water( ... ) RubHands( ...) Dry-w-Towel( ...) A B ApplySoap( ... ) Rinse( ...) A : hands fully soaped B : no more soap left C : hands clean & dry

  17. Interleaving of SubeventsScripting for (Inter)Connectivity • Issues: • Massive knowledge acquisition bottleneck • Representation format • Doable at all ? • Hand Washing • ... • Drying your hands • Pre: hands are wet & no soap left • Act: fetch towel • If towel not available call towel maintenance unit • Towel alternatives: other paper or textile tissues such as handkerchiefs, toilet paper, ... • Post: hands are dry & clean • NonDefaultPre: hands are wet & alcohol-based hand sanitizer was used • NonDefaultAct: wait until alcohol has evaporated • Post: hand are dry & clean • If not clean: wash hands with soap

  18. Lexical Encoding of Events • Verbs (mind your [DG] parser!) • He washed his hands • I‘m washing my hands • Perfective, progressive, aspectuality ... • but cf. also stative verbs such as know, like, … • Nominalizations • My hand washing was a nightmare • Washing machines help you save time • Adjectives, adverbs • Hand-washed shirts are cleaner than those which are machine-washed

  19. Textual Encoding of Events • Event cohesion • He washed his hands. They were covered with mud and thus needed extensive brushing. • Event coherence • He washed his hands. The soap smelt like peaches. • He had washed his hands. Still the oil remained on his skin.

  20. What‘s so Special about Events ? • Moving from single, mostly binary relations to sets of interrelated n-ary relations (n usually >2) • Types of interrelations: • Precedence/succession • (symbolic) temporal relations • Temporal Interval Calculus: 13 atomic rels vs. time point (numerical clock) calculi • logical entailment ccausality • Event granularity • Default events & (lots of) exceptions

  21. Formal Description of Knowledge Types • Description of Static Knowledge • Logic (FOL, in particular) • Description of Dynamic Knowledge (state changes) • Differential equations • Qualitative physics, biology, economics,... • Petri Nets (and other graph/network reps) • Planning languages (STRIPS, PDDL, ASBRU, …) • Logics considered harmful • dynamic PL, TLs (point/interval), MLs

  22. (Some of) The Challenges of Event Representation • Associating ontologies w.\ textual realizations • Linguistic categories (on-going process, result of a process, etc.) matter g features • Scalability from simple to advanced representations (granularity sliding) • Different breed of inference rules • real ‚world modeling‘ • Frame axioms (tracking changes of the world) • Given all that representational richness – How tractable are event calculi? • Stay on the poor side of life ? – How adequate will your results be ?

  23. Machine Learning Challenges ofEvent Extraction • Formal basis of event description • Symbolic, discrete KRs • Learning the building blocks of complex events • Sets of n-ary relations • Learning connectivity criteria for these (sub)relations • Precedence/succession • Temporal orderings • ICs, Inference rules a“Causality” • Numerical, continuous KRs • Quantitative data ainduction of differential equations • Methodological Frameworks • Learning (timed, probabilistic) FSAs, Bayesian Ns • Event (process) mining: Petri Nets (IPM@ECML08) • ILP • Temporal logic-based learning (see also TimeML)

  24. Clinical Events: Guidelines (for diabetis – type 2) National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/CG66T2DQRG.pdf

  25. G. Duftschmidt, S. Miksch, W. Gall AI in Medicine, 2002 Clinical Events:Formalization of Guidelines Y. Shavar, S. Miksch, P. Johnson AI in Medicine, 1997

  26. Biological Events: Gene Regulation The process that modulates the frequency, rate or extent of gene expression, where gene expression is the process in which the coding sequence of a gene is converted into a gene product(s) (protein, RNA). (Gene Ontology)‏ Figure: Positive and Negative Regulation of Gene Transcription (Expression). http://employees.csbsju.edu/hjakubowski/classes/ch331/bind/olbindtransciption.html

  27. ECML PKDD 2008 European Conference on Machine Learning and Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases Workshop on High-Level Information Extraction 15-19 September, Antwerp, Belgium What‘s an Event ?How Ontologies and Linguistic Semantics Shape Upcoming Challenges for Machine Learning Models of Event Extraction Udo Hahn Jena University Language and Information Engineering (JULIE) Lab www.julielab.de

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