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Interfaces for Intense Information Analysis

This research by Marti Hearst at UC Berkeley explores interfaces that support search and analysis for intelligence analysts, biomedical researchers, and investigative reporters. The goal is to create user-friendly interfaces that facilitate hypothesis formation, easy movement between multiple views, and representation of multiple clues and uncertainty.

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Interfaces for Intense Information Analysis

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  1. Interfaces for Intense Information Analysis Marti Hearst UC Berkeley This research funded by ARDA

  2. Outline • A contrast • Search vs. Analysis • Goals for three user groups • Intelligence Analysts • Biomedical Researchers • Investigative Reporters • Our current interface design

  3. Search vs. Analysis Search: Finding hay in a haystack Analysis: Creating new hay

  4. UIs for Search vs. Analysis • Search: • A necessary but undesirable step in a larger task • UI should not draw attention to itself • UI should be very easy to use for everyone • Analysis: • The larger task • UI can be more of a “science project” • But UI should have “flow”

  5. General Goals • Support hypothesis formation / refutation • Flow • Easy creation, destruction, and cataloging of connections and coverage • Easy movement between multiple views • Represent: • Multiple supporting clues • Conflicting evidence • Uncertainty • Timeliness • Non-monotonicity

  6. Intelligence Analysts

  7. Intelligence Analysts • I have recently interviewed several active counter-terrorist analysts • Great diversity in • Goals • Computing environments • Biggest problems are social/systemic • Many mundane IT problems as well

  8. Mundane IT Problems • System incompatibilities • Data reformatting • Data cleaning • Documenting sources • Archiving materials

  9. Intelligence Analysts: Problem 1 • Look at a series of reports, images, communication patterns; • Try to build a model of what is going on • Follow leads • Compare to previous situations • Recent problem: • Groups are changing their behavior patterns quickly • Very little use of sophisticated software tools

  10. Intelligence Analysts: Problem 2 • Given a large collection • “Roll around” in the data • See what has been “touched” • Tools should indicate which parts of the collection have been examined and which have yet to be looked at, and by whom • View data in several different ways • Data reduction methods such as MDS, SVD, and clustering often hide important trends.

  11. Intelligence Analysts: Problem 2 • Don’t show the obvious • e.g., Cheney is president • Don’t show what you’ve already shown • Only show the most recent version • Show which info is not present • Changes in the usual pattern • Something stops happening

  12. Intelligence Analysts: Problem 3 • Prepare a very short executive summary for the purposes of policy making • Really the culmination of a cascade of summaries • Reps from different agencies meet and “pow-wow” to form a view of the situation • Rarely, but crucially, must be able to refer back to original sources and reasoning process for purposes of accountability

  13. BioInformatics Researchers

  14. BioInformatics Example 1 • How to discover new information … • … As opposed to discovering which statistical patterns characterize occurrence of known information. • Method: • Use large text collections to gather evidence to support (or refute) hypotheses • Make Connections • Gather Evidence

  15. Etiology Example • Don Swanson example, 1991 • Goal: find cause of disease • Magnesium-migraine connection • Given • medical titles and abstracts • a problem (incurable rare disease) • some medical expertise • find causal links among titles • symptoms • drugs • results

  16. Gathering Evidence stress CCB migraine magnesium magnesium PA SCD magnesium magnesium

  17. CCB PA SCD stress Gathering Evidence migraine magnesium

  18. Swanson’s Linking Approach • Two of his hypotheses have received some experimental verification. • His technique • Only partially automated • Required medical expertise

  19. BioInformatics Example 2: • How to find functions of genes? • Have the genetic sequence • Don’t know what it does • But … • Know which genes it coexpresses with • Some of these have known function • So …infer function based on function of co-expressed genes • This is problem suggested by Michael Walker and others at Incyte Pharmaceuticals

  20. Gene Co-expression:Role in the genetic pathway Kall. Kall. g? h? PSA PSA PAP PAP g? Other possibilities as well

  21. Make use of the literature • Look up what is known about the other genes. • Different articles in different collections • Look for commonalities • Similar topics indicated by Subject Descriptors • Similar words in titles and abstracts adenocarcinoma, neoplasm, prostate, prostatic neoplasms, tumor markers, antibodies ...

  22. Formulate a Hypothesis • Hypothesis: mystery gene has to do with regulation of expression of genes leading to prostate cancer • New tack: do some lab tests • See if mystery gene is similar in molecular structure to the others • If so, it might do some of the same things they do

  23. Investigative Reporter Example • Looking for trends in online literature • Create, support, refute hypotheses

  24. Investigative Reporter Example Clustering Corpus-level statistics, Co-occurrence statistics Contrasting collection statistics • What are the current main topics? • What are the new popular terms? • How do they track with the news?

  25. Investigative Reporter Example Named-entity recognition Creating a list of terms Apply the list to a Subcollection Create regex rules with POS information • How long after a new Star Trek series comes on the air before characters from the series appear in stories? • How often do Klingons initiate attacks against Vulcans, vs. the converse?

  26. Summary Query Analysis Term Set Document Set All terms: * a c u y m z x x Diseases: emphysema cancer hypertension … New Merge All documents: * WHO: organization = world health organization LINDI File Help

  27. Thank you! bailando.sims.berkeley.edu/lindi.html For more information:

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