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Rainbow Tool Kit Matt Perry Global Information Systems Spring 2003
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Outline 1. Introduction to Rainbow 2. Description of Bow Library 3. Description of Rainbow methods 1. Naïve Bayes 2. TFIDF/Rocchio 3. K Nearest Neighbor 4. Probabilistic Indexing 4. Demonstration of Rainbow 1. 20 newsgroups example
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What is Rainbow? Publicly available executable program that performs document classification Part of the Bow (or libbow) library A library of C code useful for writing statistical text analysis, language modeling and information retrieval programs Developed by Andrew McCallum of Carnegie Mellon University
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About Bow Library Provides facilities for Recursively descending directories, finding text files. Finding `document' boundaries when there are multiple documents per file. Tokenizing a text file, according to several different methods. Including N-grams among the tokens. Mapping strings to integers and back again, very efficiently. Building a sparse matrix of document/token counts. Pruning vocabulary by word counts or by information gain. Building and manipulating word vectors.
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About Bow Library Provides facilities for Setting word vector weights according to Naive Bayes, TFIDF, and several other methods. Smoothing word probabilities according to Laplace (Dirichlet uniform), M-estimates, Witten-Bell, and Good- Turning. Scoring queries for retrieval or classification. Writing all data structures to disk in a compact format. Reading the document/token matrix from disk in an efficient, sparse fashion. Performing test/train splits, and automatic classification tests. Operating in server mode, receiving and answering queries over a socket.
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About Bow Library Does Not Have English parsing or part-of-speech tagging facilities. Do smoothing across N-gram models. Claim to be finished. Have good documentation. Claim to be bug-free. Run on a Windows Machine.
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About Bow Library In Addition to Rainbow, Bow contains 3 other executable programs Crossbow - does document clustering Arrow - does document retrieval – TFIDF Archer - does document retrieval Supports AltaVista-type queries +, -, “”, etc.
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Back to Rainbow Classification Methods used by Rainbow Naïve Bayes (mostly designed for this) TFIDF/Rocchio K-Nearest Neighbor Probabilistic Indexing
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Description of Naïve Bayes Bayesian reasoning provides a probabilistic approach to learning. Idea of Naïve Bayes Classification is to assign a new instance the most probable target value, given the attribute values of the new instance. How?
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Description of Naïve Bayes Based on Bayes Theorem Notation P(h) = probability that a hypothesis h holds Ex. Pr (document1 fits the sports category) P(D) = probability that training data D will be observed Ex. Pr (we will encounter document1)
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Description of Naïve Bayes Notation Continued P(D|h) probability of observing data D given that hypothesis h holds. Ex. Probability that we will observe document 1 given that document 1 is about sports P(h|D) probability that h holds given training data D. This is what we want Probability that document 1 is a sports document given the training data D
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Description of Naïve Bayes Bayes Theorem
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Description of Naïve Bayes Bayes Theorem Provides a way to calculate P(h|D) from P(h), together with P(D) and P(D|h). Increases with P(D|h) and P(h) Decreases with P(D) Implies that it is more probable to observe D independent of h. Less evidence D provides in support of h.
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Description of Naïve Bayes Approach: Assign the most probable target value given the attributes
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Description of Naïve Bayes Simplification based on Bayes Theorem
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Description of Naïve Bayes Naïve Bayes assumes (incorrectly) that the attribute values are conditionally independent given the target value
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Rainbow Algorithm Let= probability that a document belongs to class Let = probability that a randomly drawn word from class will be the word
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Rainbow Algorithm Estimate
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Rainbow Algorithm 1. Collect all words, punctuation, and other tokens that occur in examples 2. Calculate the required and probability terms 3. Return the estimated target value for the document Doc
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TFIDF/Rocchio Most major component of the Rocchio algorithm is the TFIDF (term frequency / inverse document frequency) word weighting scheme. TF(w,d) (Term Frequency) is the number of times word w occurs in a document d. DF(w) (Document Frequency) is the number of documents in which the word w occurs at least once.
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TFIDF/Rocchio The inverse document frequency is calculated as
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TFIDF/Rocchio Based on word weight heuristics, the word w i is an important indexing term for a document d if it occurs frequently in that document However, words that occurs frequently in many document spanning many categories are rated less importantly
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TFIDF/Rocchio Each document is D is represented as a vector within a given vector space V:
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TFIDF/Rocchio Value of d (i) of feature w i for a document d is calculated as the product d(i) is called the weight of the word w i in the document d.
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TFIDF/Rocchio Documents that are “close together” in vector space talk about the same things. t1t1 d1d1 d3d3 d5d5 t2t2 θ φ t3t3 d2d2 d4d4 http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs276a/handouts/lecture4.ppt
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TFIDF/Rocchio Distance between vectors d 1 and d 2 captured by the cosine of the angle x between them. Note – this is similarity, not distance t 1 d2d2 d1d1 t 3 t 2 θ http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs276a/handouts/lecture4.ppt
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TFIDF/Rocchio Cosine of angle between two vectors The denominator involves the lengths of the vectors So the cosine measure is also known as the normalized inner product http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs276a/handouts/lecture4.ppt
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TFIDF/Rocchio A vector can be normalized (given a length of 1) by dividing each of its components by the vector's length This maps vectors onto the unit circle: Then, Longer documents don’t get more weight For normalized vectors, the cosine is simply the dot product: http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs276a/handouts/lecture4.ppt
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Rainbow Algorithm Construct a set of prototype vectors One vector for each class This serves as learned model Model is used to classify a new document D D is assigned to the class with the most similar vector
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K Nearest Neighbor Features All instances correspond to points in an n- dimensional Euclidean space Classification is delayed until a new instance arrives Classification done by comparing feature vectors of the different points Target function may be discrete or real-valued
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K Nearest Neighbor 1 Nearest Neighbor
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K Nearest Neighbor An arbitrary instance is represented by(a 1 (x), a 2 (x), a 3 (x),.., a n (x)) a i (x) denotes features Euclidean distance between two instances d(x i, x j )=sqrt (sum for r=1 to n (a r (x i ) - a r (x j )) 2 ) Find the k-nearest neighbors whose distance from your test cases falls within a threshold p. If x of those k-nearest neighbors are in category c i, then assign the test case to c i, else it is unmatched.
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Rainbow Algorithm Construct a model of points in n-dimensional space for each category Classify a document D based on the k nearest points
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Probabilistic Indexing Idea Quantitative model for automatic indexing based on some statistical assumptions about word distribution. 2 Types of words: function words, specialty words Function words = words with no importance for defining classes (the, it, etc.) Specialty words = words that are important in defining classes (war, terrorist, etc.)
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Probabilistic Indexing Idea Function words follow a Poisson distribution over the set of all documents Specialty words do not follow a Poisson distribution over the set of all documents Specialty word distribution can be described by a Poisson process within its class Specialty words distinguish more than one class of documents
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Rainbow Method Goal is to estimate P(C|s i, d m ) Probability that assignment of term s i to the document d m is correct Once terms have been identified, assign Form Of Occurrence (FOC) Certainty that term is correctly identified Significance of Term
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Rainbow Method If term t appears in document d and a term descriptor from t to s exists, s an indexing term, then generate a descriptor indictor Set of generated term descriptors can be evaluated and a probability calculated that document d lies in class c
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Rainbow Demonstration 20 newsgroups example References http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs276a/handouts/lecture4.ppt http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs276a/handouts/lecture4.ppt http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~mccallum/bow/ http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~mccallum/bow/ http://webster.cs.uga.edu/~miller/SemWeb/Project/ApMlPresent.ppt http://webster.cs.uga.edu/~miller/SemWeb/Project/ApMlPresent.ppt http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/vanrijsbergen79information.html http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/vanrijsbergen79information.html http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/54920.html http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/54920.html Mitchell, Tom M. Machine Learning. 1997 http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~tom/book.html
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Rainbow Commands Create a model for the classes: rainbow -d ~/model --index training directory Classifying Documents: Pick Method (naivebayes, knn, tfidf, prind ) rainbow -d ~/model --method=tfidf --test=1 Automatic Test: rainbow -d ~/model --test-set=0.4 --test=3 Test 1 at a time: rainbow -d ~/model –query test file
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Rainbow Demonstration Can also run as a server: rainbow -d ~/model --query-server=port Use telnet to classify new documents Diagnostics: List the words with the highest mutual info: rainbow -d ~/model -I 10 Perl script for printing stats: rainbow -d ~/model --test-set=0.4 --test=2 | rainbow- stats.pl
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