2011
Authors
Oliveira, L; Rodrigues, A; Nunes, H; Dias, L; Coelho, A; Oliveira, JM; Carrapatoso, E; Leitao, MJ;
Publication
SISTEMAS E TECNOLOGIAS DE INFORMACAO, VOL I
Abstract
Several developments have been observed recently in areas such as Web development, social networks, interface design, recommendation systems and Geographic Information Systems (GIS). The integration of these developments can provide a superior experience, greater than the sum of their individual contributions, regarding user satisfaction. This paper proposes an integration of all these innovations in e-tourism, more specifically by the development of a Web based geographic information platform adaptable to any tourist region. As a case study, we also show how this platform was adapted to the Douro region, in Portugal. The Web platform developed as a proof of concept combines geospatial information from diverse and heterogeneous data sources, encompassing events, news, routes and points of interest (POI). This platform provides also a recommendation engine and features the possibility that users can contribute with content as part of the community, thus emerging a mini social network. © 2011 AISTI.
2023
Authors
Victoriano, M; Oliveira, L; Oliveira, HP;
Publication
Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis - 11th Iberian Conference, IbPRIA 2023, Alicante, Spain, June 27-30, 2023, Proceedings
Abstract
2023
Authors
Tse, A; Oliveira, L; Vinagre, J;
Publication
PROGRESS IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, EPIA 2023, PT I
Abstract
Several systems that employ machine learning models are subject to strict latency requirements. Fraud detection systems, transportation control systems, network traffic analysis and footwear manufacturing processes are a few examples. These requirements are imposed at inference time, when the model is queried. However, it is not trivial how to adjust model architecture and hyperparameters in order to obtain a good trade-off between predictive ability and inference time. This paper provides a contribution in this direction by presenting a study of how different architectural and hyperparameter choices affect the inference time of a Convolutional Neural Network for network traffic analysis. Our case study focus on a model for traffic correlation attacks to the Tor network, that requires the correlation of a large volume of network flows in a short amount of time. Our findings suggest that hyperparameters related to convolution operations-such as stride, and the number of filters-and the reduction of convolution and max-pooling layers can substantially reduce inference time, often with a relatively small cost in predictive performance.
2023
Authors
Ramos, R; Oliveira, L; Vinagre, J;
Publication
PROGRESS IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, EPIA 2023, PT I
Abstract
In an automatic music playlist generator, such as an automated online radio channel, how should the system react when a user hits the skip button? Can we use this type of negative feedback to improve the list of songs we will playback for the user next? We propose SkipAwareRec, a next-item recommendation system based on reinforcement learning. SkipAwareRec recommends the best next music categories, considering positive feedback consisting of normal listening behaviour, and negative feedback in the form of song skips. Since SkipAwareRec recommends broad categories, it needs to be coupled with a model able to choose the best individual items. To do this, we propose Hybrid SkipAwareRec. This hybrid model combines the SkipAwareRec with an incremental Matrix Factorisation (MF) algorithm that selects specific songs within the recommended categories. Our experiments with Spotify's Sequential Skip Prediction Challenge dataset show that Hybrid SkipAwareRec has the potential to improve recommendations by a considerable amount with respect to the skip-agnostic MF algorithm. This strongly suggests that reformulating the next recommendations based on skips improves the quality of automatic playlists. Although in this work we focus on sequential music recommendation, our proposal can be applied to other sequential content recommendation domains, such as health for user engagement.
2024
Authors
Victoriano, M; Oliveira, L; Oliveira, HP;
Publication
Proceedings of the 19th International Joint Conference on Computer Vision, Imaging and Computer Graphics Theory and Applications, VISIGRAPP 2024, Volume 2: VISAPP, Rome, Italy, February 27-29, 2024.
Abstract
Climate change is causing the emergence of new pest species and diseases, threatening economies, public health, and food security. In Europe, olive groves are crucial for producing olive oil and table olives; however, the presence of the olive fruit fly (Bactrocera Oleae) poses a significant threat, causing crop losses and financial hardship. Early disease and pest detection methods are crucial for addressing this issue. This work presents a pioneering comparative performance study between two state-of-the-art object detection models, YOLOv5 and YOLOv8, for the detection of the olive fruit fly from trap images, marking the first-ever application of these models in this context. The dataset was obtained by merging two existing datasets: the DIRT dataset, collected in Greece, and the CIMO-IPB dataset, collected in Portugal. To increase its diversity and size, the dataset was augmented, and then both models were fine-tuned. A set of metrics were calculated, to assess both models performance. Early detection techniques like these can be incorporated in electronic traps, to effectively safeguard crops from the adverse impacts caused by climate change, ultimately ensuring food security and sustainable agriculture. © 2024 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda.
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