TY - GEN A1 - Cabalar, Pedro A1 - Fandinno, Jorge A1 - Schaub, Torsten H. A1 - Schellhorn, Sebastian T1 - Lower Bound Founded Logic of Here-and-There T2 - Logics in Artificial Intelligence N2 - A distinguishing feature of Answer Set Programming is that all atoms belonging to a stable model must be founded. That is, an atom must not only be true but provably true. This can be made precise by means of the constructive logic of Here-and-There, whose equilibrium models correspond to stable models. One way of looking at foundedness is to regard Boolean truth values as ordered by letting true be greater than false. Then, each Boolean variable takes the smallest truth value that can be proven for it. This idea was generalized by Aziz to ordered domains and applied to constraint satisfaction problems. As before, the idea is that a, say integer, variable gets only assigned to the smallest integer that can be justified. In this paper, we present a logical reconstruction of Aziz’ idea in the setting of the logic of Here-and-There. More precisely, we start by defining the logic of Here-and-There with lower bound founded variables along with its equilibrium models and elaborate upon its formal properties. Finally, we compare our approach with related ones and sketch future work. Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-3-030-19570-0 SN - 978-3-030-19569-4 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-19570-0_34 SN - 0302-9743 SN - 1611-3349 VL - 11468 SP - 509 EP - 525 PB - Springer CY - Cham ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Waitelonis, Jörg A1 - Jürges, Henrik A1 - Sack, Harald T1 - Remixing entity linking evaluation datasets for focused benchmarking JF - Semantic Web N2 - In recent years, named entity linking (NEL) tools were primarily developed in terms of a general approach, whereas today numerous tools are focusing on specific domains such as e.g. the mapping of persons and organizations only, or the annotation of locations or events in microposts. However, the available benchmark datasets necessary for the evaluation of NEL tools do not reflect this focalizing trend. We have analyzed the evaluation process applied in the NEL benchmarking framework GERBIL [in: Proceedings of the 24th International Conference on World Wide Web (WWW’15), International World Wide Web Conferences Steering Committee, Republic and Canton of Geneva, Switzerland, 2015, pp. 1133–1143, Semantic Web 9(5) (2018), 605–625] and all its benchmark datasets. Based on these insights we have extended the GERBIL framework to enable a more fine grained evaluation and in depth analysis of the available benchmark datasets with respect to different emphases. This paper presents the implementation of an adaptive filter for arbitrary entities and customized benchmark creation as well as the automated determination of typical NEL benchmark dataset properties, such as the extent of content-related ambiguity and diversity. These properties are integrated on different levels, which also enables to tailor customized new datasets out of the existing ones by remixing documents based on desired emphases. Besides a new system library to enrich provided NIF [in: International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC’13), Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 8219, Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2013, pp. 98–113] datasets with statistical information, best practices for dataset remixing are presented, and an in depth analysis of the performance of entity linking systems on special focus datasets is presented. KW - Entity Linking KW - GERBIL KW - evaluation KW - benchmark Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3233/SW-180334 SN - 1570-0844 SN - 2210-4968 VL - 10 IS - 2 SP - 385 EP - 412 PB - IOS Press CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Frioux, Clémence A1 - Schaub, Torsten H. A1 - Schellhorn, Sebastian A1 - Siegel, Anne A1 - Wanko, Philipp T1 - Hybrid metabolic network completion JF - Theory and practice of logic programming N2 - Metabolic networks play a crucial role in biology since they capture all chemical reactions in an organism. While there are networks of high quality for many model organisms, networks for less studied organisms are often of poor quality and suffer from incompleteness. To this end, we introduced in previous work an answer set programming (ASP)-based approach to metabolic network completion. Although this qualitative approach allows for restoring moderately degraded networks, it fails to restore highly degraded ones. This is because it ignores quantitative constraints capturing reaction rates. To address this problem, we propose a hybrid approach to metabolic network completion that integrates our qualitative ASP approach with quantitative means for capturing reaction rates. We begin by formally reconciling existing stoichiometric and topological approaches to network completion in a unified formalism. With it, we develop a hybrid ASP encoding and rely upon the theory reasoning capacities of the ASP system dingo for solving the resulting logic program with linear constraints over reals. We empirically evaluate our approach by means of the metabolic network of Escherichia coli. Our analysis shows that our novel approach yields greatly superior results than obtainable from purely qualitative or quantitative approaches. KW - answer set programming KW - metabolic network KW - gap-filling KW - linear programming KW - hybrid solving KW - bioinformatics Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S1471068418000455 SN - 1471-0684 SN - 1475-3081 VL - 19 IS - 1 SP - 83 EP - 108 PB - Cambridge University Press CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Fichte, Johannes Klaus A1 - Hecher, Markus A1 - Meier, Arne T1 - Counting Complexity for Reasoning in Abstract Argumentation T2 - The Thirty-Third AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, the Thirty-First Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, the Ninth AAAI Symposium on Educational Advances in Artificial Intelligence N2 - In this paper, we consider counting and projected model counting of extensions in abstract argumentation for various semantics. When asking for projected counts we are interested in counting the number of extensions of a given argumentation framework while multiple extensions that are identical when restricted to the projected arguments count as only one projected extension. We establish classical complexity results and parameterized complexity results when the problems are parameterized by treewidth of the undirected argumentation graph. To obtain upper bounds for counting projected extensions, we introduce novel algorithms that exploit small treewidth of the undirected argumentation graph of the input instance by dynamic programming (DP). Our algorithms run in time double or triple exponential in the treewidth depending on the considered semantics. Finally, we take the exponential time hypothesis (ETH) into account and establish lower bounds of bounded treewidth algorithms for counting extensions and projected extension. Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-57735-809-1 SP - 2827 EP - 2834 PB - AAAI Press CY - Palo Alto ER - TY - THES A1 - Schneider, Jan Niklas T1 - Computational approaches for emotion research T1 - Computergestützte Methoden für die Emotionsforschung N2 - Emotionen sind ein zentrales Element menschlichen Erlebens und spielen eine wichtige Rolle bei der Entscheidungsfindung. Diese Dissertation identifiziert drei methodische Probleme der aktuellen Emotionsforschung und zeigt auf, wie diese mittels computergestützter Methoden gelöst werden können. Dieser Ansatz wird in drei Forschungsprojekten demonstriert, die die Entwicklung solcher Methoden sowie deren Anwendung auf konkrete Forschungsfragen beschreiben. Das erste Projekt beschreibt ein Paradigma welches es ermöglicht, die subjektive und objektive Schwierigkeit der Emotionswahrnehmung zu messen. Darüber hinaus ermöglicht es die Verwendung einer beliebigen Anzahl von Emotionskategorien im Vergleich zu den üblichen sechs Kategorien der Basisemotionen. Die Ergebnisse deuten auf eine Zunahme der Schwierigkeiten bei der Wahrnehmung von Emotionen mit zunehmendem Alter der Darsteller hin und liefern Hinweise darauf, dass junge Erwachsene, ältere Menschen und Männer ihre Schwierigkeit bei der Wahrnehmung von Emotionen unterschätzen. Weitere Analysen zeigten eine geringe Relevanz personenbezogener Variablen und deuteten darauf hin, dass die Schwierigkeit der Emotionswahrnehmung vornehmlich durch die Ausprägung der Wertigkeit des Ausdrucks bestimmt wird. Das zweite Projekt zeigt am Beispiel von Arousal, einem etablierten, aber vagen Konstrukt der Emotionsforschung, wie Face-Tracking-Daten dazu genutzt werden können solche Konstrukte zu schärfen. Es beschreibt, wie aus Face-Tracking-Daten Maße für die Entfernung, Geschwindigkeit und Beschleunigung von Gesichtsausdrücken berechnet werden können. Das Projekt untersuchte wie diesen Maße mit der Arousal-Wahrnehmung in Menschen mit und ohne Autismus zusammenhängen. Der Abstand zum Neutralgesicht war prädiktiv für die Arousal-Bewertungen in beiden Gruppen. Die Ergebnisse deuten auf eine qualitativ ähnliche Wahrnehmung von Arousal für Menschen mit und ohne Autismus hin. Im dritten Projekt stellen wir die Partial-Least-Squares-Analyse als allgemeine Methode vor, um eine optimale Repräsentation zur Verknüpfung zweier hochdimensionale Datensätze zu finden. Das Projekt demonstriert die Anwendbarkeit dieser Methode in der Emotionsforschung anhand der Frage nach Unterschieden in der Emotionswahrnehmung zwischen Männern und Frauen. Wir konnten zeigen, dass die emotionale Wahrnehmung von Frauen systematisch mehr Varianz der Gesichtsausdrücke erfasst und dass signifikante Unterschiede in der Art und Weise bestehen, wie Frauen und Männer einige Gesichtsausdrücke wahrnehmen. Diese konnten wir als dynamische Gesichtsausdrücke visualisieren. Um die Anwendung der entwickelten Methode für die Forschungsgemeinschaft zu erleichtern, wurde ein Software-Paket für die Statistikumgebung R geschrieben. Zudem wurde eine Website entwickelt (thisemotiondoesnotexist.com), die es Besuchern erlaubt, ein Partial-Least-Squares-Modell von Emotionsbewertungen und Face-Tracking-Daten interaktiv zu erkunden, um die entwickelte Methode zu verbreiten und ihren Nutzen für die Emotionsforschung zu illustrieren. N2 - Emotions are a central element of human experience. They occur with high frequency in everyday life and play an important role in decision making. However, currently there is no consensus among researchers on what constitutes an emotion and on how emotions should be investigated. This dissertation identifies three problems of current emotion research: the problem of ground truth, the problem of incomplete constructs and the problem of optimal representation. I argue for a focus on the detailed measurement of emotion manifestations with computer-aided methods to solve these problems. This approach is demonstrated in three research projects, which describe the development of methods specific to these problems as well as their application to concrete research questions. The problem of ground truth describes the practice to presuppose a certain structure of emotions as the a priori ground truth. This determines the range of emotion descriptions and sets a standard for the correct assignment of these descriptions. The first project illustrates how this problem can be circumvented with a multidimensional emotion perception paradigm which stands in contrast to the emotion recognition paradigm typically employed in emotion research. This paradigm allows to calculate an objective difficulty measure and to collect subjective difficulty ratings for the perception of emotional stimuli. Moreover, it enables the use of an arbitrary number of emotion stimuli categories as compared to the commonly used six basic emotion categories. Accordingly, we collected data from 441 participants using dynamic facial expression stimuli from 40 emotion categories. Our findings suggest an increase in emotion perception difficulty with increasing actor age and provide evidence to suggest that young adults, the elderly and men underestimate their emotion perception difficulty. While these effects were predicted from the literature, we also found unexpected and novel results. In particular, the increased difficulty on the objective difficulty measure for female actors and observers stood in contrast to reported findings. Exploratory analyses revealed low relevance of person-specific variables for the prediction of emotion perception difficulty, but highlighted the importance of a general pleasure dimension for the ease of emotion perception. The second project targets the problem of incomplete constructs which relates to vaguely defined psychological constructs on emotion with insufficient ties to tangible manifestations. The project exemplifies how a modern data collection method such as face tracking data can be used to sharpen these constructs on the example of arousal, a long-standing but fuzzy construct in emotion research. It describes how measures of distance, speed and magnitude of acceleration can be computed from face tracking data and investigates their intercorrelations. We find moderate to strong correlations among all measures of static information on one hand and all measures of dynamic information on the other. The project then investigates how self-rated arousal is tied to these measures in 401 neurotypical individuals and 19 individuals with autism. Distance to the neutral face was predictive of arousal ratings in both groups. Lower mean arousal ratings were found for the autistic group, but no difference in correlation of the measures and arousal ratings could be found between groups. Results were replicated in a high autistic traits group consisting of 41 participants. The findings suggest a qualitatively similar perception of arousal for individuals with and without autism. No correlations between valence ratings and any of the measures could be found which emphasizes the specificity of our tested measures for the construct of arousal. The problem of optimal representation refers to the search for the best representation of emotions and the assumption that there is a one-fits-all solution. In the third project we introduce partial least squares analysis as a general method to find an optimal representation to relate two high-dimensional data sets to each other. The project demonstrates its applicability to emotion research on the question of emotion perception differences between men and women. The method was used with emotion rating data from 441 participants and face tracking data computed on 306 videos. We found quantitative as well as qualitative differences in the perception of emotional facial expressions between these groups. We showed that women’s emotional perception systematically captured more of the variance in facial expressions. Additionally, we could show that significant differences exist in the way that women and men perceive some facial expressions which could be visualized as concrete facial expression sequences. These expressions suggest differing perceptions of masked and ambiguous facial expressions between the sexes. In order to facilitate use of the developed method by the research community, a package for the statistical environment R was written. Furthermore, to call attention to the method and its usefulness for emotion research, a website was designed that allows users to explore a model of emotion ratings and facial expression data in an interactive fashion. KW - facial expression KW - emotion KW - perception KW - face tracking KW - perception differences KW - emotion representation KW - Gesichtsausdruck KW - Emotionen KW - Wahrnehmung KW - Wahrnehmungsunterschiede KW - computational methods KW - emotion research KW - computergestützte Methoden KW - Emotionsforschung KW - arousal perception KW - objective difficulty KW - Wahrnehmung von Arousal KW - Objektive Schwierigkeit Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-459275 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Strickroth, Sven T1 - PLATON BT - Developing a Graphical Lesson Planning System for Prospective Teachers JF - Education Sciences N2 - Lesson planning is both an important and demanding task—especially as part of teacher training. This paper presents the requirements for a lesson planning system and evaluates existing systems regarding these requirements. One major drawback of existing software tools is that most are limited to a text- or form-based representation of the lesson designs. In this article, a new approach with a graphical, time-based representation with (automatic) analyses methods is proposed and the system architecture and domain model are described in detail. The approach is implemented in an interactive, web-based prototype called PLATON, which additionally supports the management of lessons in units as well as the modelling of teacher and student-generated resources. The prototype was evaluated in a study with 61 prospective teachers (bachelor’s and master’s preservice teachers as well as teacher trainees in post-university teacher training) in Berlin, Germany, with a focus on usability. The results show that this approach proofed usable for lesson planning and offers positive effects for the perception of time and self-reflection. KW - lesson planning KW - lesson preparation KW - support system KW - automatic feedback Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci9040254 SN - 2227-7102 VL - 9 IS - 4 PB - MDPI CY - Basel ER - TY - THES A1 - Tiwari, Abhishek T1 - Enhancing Users’ Privacy: Static Resolution of the Dynamic Properties of Android N2 - The usage of mobile devices is rapidly growing with Android being the most prevalent mobile operating system. Thanks to the vast variety of mobile applications, users are preferring smartphones over desktops for day to day tasks like Internet surfing. Consequently, smartphones store a plenitude of sensitive data. This data together with the high values of smartphones make them an attractive target for device/data theft (thieves/malicious applications). Unfortunately, state-of-the-art anti-theft solutions do not work if they do not have an active network connection, e.g., if the SIM card was removed from the device. In the majority of these cases, device owners permanently lose their smartphone together with their personal data, which is even worse. Apart from that malevolent applications perform malicious activities to steal sensitive information from smartphones. Recent research considered static program analysis to detect dangerous data leaks. These analyses work well for data leaks due to inter-component communication, but suffer from shortcomings for inter-app communication with respect to precision, soundness, and scalability. This thesis focuses on enhancing users' privacy on Android against physical device loss/theft and (un)intentional data leaks. It presents three novel frameworks: (1) ThiefTrap, an anti-theft framework for Android, (2) IIFA, a modular inter-app intent information flow analysis of Android applications, and (3) PIAnalyzer, a precise approach for PendingIntent vulnerability analysis. ThiefTrap is based on a novel concept of an anti-theft honeypot account that protects the owner's data while preventing a thief from resetting the device. We implemented the proposed scheme and evaluated it through an empirical user study with 35 participants. In this study, the owner's data could be protected, recovered, and anti-theft functionality could be performed unnoticed from the thief in all cases. IIFA proposes a novel approach for Android's inter-component/inter-app communication (ICC/IAC) analysis. Our main contribution is the first fully automatic, sound, and precise ICC/IAC information flow analysis that is scalable for realistic apps due to modularity, avoiding combinatorial explosion: Our approach determines communicating apps using short summaries rather than inlining intent calls between components and apps, which requires simultaneously analyzing all apps installed on a device. We evaluate IIFA in terms of precision, recall, and demonstrate its scalability to a large corpus of real-world apps. IIFA reports 62 problematic ICC-/IAC-related information flows via two or more apps/components. PIAnalyzer proposes a novel approach to analyze PendingIntent related vulnerabilities. PendingIntents are a powerful and universal feature of Android for inter-component communication. We empirically evaluate PIAnalyzer on a set of 1000 randomly selected applications and find 1358 insecure usages of PendingIntents, including 70 severe vulnerabilities. N2 - Die Nutzung von mobilen Geräten nimmt rasant zu, wobei Android das häufigste mobile Betriebssystem ist. Dank der Vielzahl an mobilen Anwendungen bevorzugen Benutzer Smartphones gegenüber Desktops für alltägliche Aufgaben wie das Surfen im Internet. Folglich speichern Smartphones eine Vielzahl sensibler Daten. Diese Daten zusammen mit den hohen Werten von Smartphones machen sie zu einem attraktiven Ziel für Geräte/Datendiebstahl (Diebe/bösartige Anwendungen). Leider funktionieren moderne Diebstahlsicherungslösungen nicht, wenn sie keine aktive Netzwerkverbindung haben, z. B. wenn die SIM-Karte aus dem Gerät entnommen wurde. In den meisten Fällen verlieren Gerätebesitzer ihr Smartphone dauerhaft zusammen mit ihren persönlichen Daten, was noch schlimmer ist. Abgesehen davon gibt es bösartige Anwendungen, die schädliche Aktivitäten ausführen, um vertrauliche Informationen von Smartphones zu stehlen. Kürzlich durchgeführte Untersuchungen berücksichtigten die statische Programmanalyse zur Erkennung gefährlicher Datenlecks. Diese Analysen eignen sich gut für Datenlecks aufgrund der Kommunikation zwischen Komponenten, weisen jedoch hinsichtlich der Präzision, Zuverlässigkeit und Skalierbarkeit Nachteile für die Kommunikation zwischen Apps auf. Diese Dissertation konzentriert sich auf die Verbesserung der Privatsphäre der Benutzer auf Android gegen Verlust/Diebstahl von physischen Geräten und (un)vorsätzlichen Datenverlust. Es werden drei neuartige Frameworks vorgestellt: (1) ThiefTrap, ein Anti-Diebstahl-Framework für Android, (2) IIFA, eine modulare Inter-App Analyse des Informationsflusses von Android Anwendungen, und (3) PIAnalyzer, ein präziser Ansatz für PendingIntent Schwachstellenanalyse. ThiefTrap basiert auf einem neuartigen Konzept eines Diebstahlschutzkontos, das die Daten des Besitzers schützt und verhindert, dass ein Dieb das Gerät zurücksetzt. Wir haben das vorgeschlagene Schema implementiert und durch eine empirische Anwenderstudie mit 35 Teilnehmern ausgewertet. In dieser Studie könnten die Daten des Besitzers geschützt und wiederhergestellt werden, und die Diebstahlsicherungsfunktion konnte in jedem Fall unbemerkt vom Dieb ausgeführt werden. IIFA schlägt einen neuen Ansatz für die Analyse von Komponenten zwischen Komponenten/ Inter-App Kommunikation (ICC/IAC) von Android vor. Unser Hauptbeitrag ist die erste vollautomatische, solide und präzise ICC/IAC Informationsflussanalyse, die aufgrund ihrer Modularität für realistische Apps skalierbar ist und eine kombinatorische Explosion vermeidet: Unser Ansatz bestimmt, dass Apps über kurze Zusammenfassungen kommuniziert werden, anstatt Absichtsaufrufe zwischen Komponenten zu verwenden und Apps, bei denen gleichzeitig alle auf einem Gerät installierten Apps analysiert werden müssen. Wir bewerten IIFA in Bezug auf Präzision, Rückruf und demonstrieren seine Skalierbarkeit für einen großen Korpus realer Apps. IIFA meldet 62 problematische ICC- / IAC-bezogene Informationsflüsse über zwei oder mehr Apps / Komponenten. PIAnalyzer schlägt einen neuen Ansatz vor, um Schwachstellen im Zusammenhang mit PendingIntent zu analysieren. PendingIntents nutzen eine leistungsstarke und universelle Funktion von Android für die Kommunikation zwischen Komponenten. Wir evaluieren PIAnalyzer empirisch an einem Satz von 1000 zufällig ausgewählten Anwendungen und finden 1358 unsichere Verwendungen von PendingIntents, einschließlich 70 schwerwiegender Schwachstellen. KW - Android Security KW - Static Analysis KW - Privacy Protection Y1 - 2019 ER - TY - THES A1 - Böhne, Sebastian T1 - Different degrees of formality T1 - Verschiedene Formalitätsgrade BT - an introduction to the concept and a demonstration of its usefulness BT - Vorstellung des Konzepts und Nachweis seiner Nützlichkeit N2 - In this thesis we introduce the concept of the degree of formality. It is directed against a dualistic point of view, which only distinguishes between formal and informal proofs. This dualistic attitude does not respect the differences between the argumentations classified as informal and it is unproductive because the individual potential of the respective argumentation styles cannot be appreciated and remains untapped. This thesis has two parts. In the first of them we analyse the concept of the degree of formality (including a discussion about the respective benefits for each degree) while in the second we demonstrate its usefulness in three case studies. In the first case study we will repair Haskell B. Curry's view of mathematics, which incidentally is of great importance in the first part of this thesis, in light of the different degrees of formality. In the second case study we delineate how awareness of the different degrees of formality can be used to help students to learn how to prove. Third, we will show how the advantages of proofs of different degrees of formality can be combined by the development of so called tactics having a medium degree of formality. Together the three case studies show that the degrees of formality provide a convincing solution to the problem of untapped potential. N2 - In dieser Dissertation stellen wir das Konzept der Formalitätsgrade vor, welches sich gegen eine dualistische Sichtweise richtet, die nur zwischen formalen und informalen Beweisen unterscheidet. Letztere Sichtweise spiegelt nämlich die Unterschiede zwischen den als informal klassifizierten Argumentationen nicht wieder und ist außerdem unproduktiv, weil sie nicht in der Lage ist, das individuelle Potential der jeweiligen Argumentationsstile wertzuschätzen und auszuschöpfen. Die Dissertation hat zwei Teile. Im ersten analysieren wir das Konzept der Formalitätsgrade (eine Diskussion über die Vorteile der jeweiligen Grade eingeschlossen), während wir im zweiten Teil die Nützlichkeit der Formalitätsgrade anhand von drei Fallbeispielen nachweisen. Im ersten von diesen werden wir Haskell B. Currys Sichtweise zur Mathematik, die nebenbei bemerkt von größter Wichtigkeit für den ersten Teil der Dissertation ist, mithilfe der verschiedenen Formalitätsgrade reparieren. Im zweiten Fallbeispiel zeigen wir auf, wie die Beachtung der verschiedenen Formalitätsgrade den Studenten dabei helfen kann, das Beweisen zu erlernen. Im letzten Fallbeispiel werden wir dann zeigen, wie die Vorteile von Beweisen verschiedener Formalitätsgrade durch die Anwendung sogenannter Taktiken mittleren Formalitätsgrades kombiniert werden können. Zusammen zeigen die drei Fallbeispiele, dass die Formalitätsgrade eine überzeugende Lösung für das Problem des ungenutzten Potentials darstellen. KW - argumentation KW - Coq KW - Curry KW - degree of formality KW - formalism KW - logic KW - mathematics education KW - philosophy of mathematics KW - proof KW - proof assistant KW - proof environment KW - tactic KW - Argumentation KW - Beweis KW - Beweisassistent KW - Beweisumgebung KW - Coq KW - Curry KW - Formalismus KW - Formalitätsgrad KW - Logik KW - Mathematikdidaktik KW - Mathematikphilosophie KW - Taktik Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-423795 N1 - CCS -> Applied computing -> Education -> Interactive learning environments CCS -> Theory of computation -> Logic CCS -> Computing methodologies -> Symbolic and algebraic manipulation -> Symbolic and algebraic algorithms -> Theorem proving algorithms ER - TY - GEN A1 - Alhosseini Almodarresi Yasin, Seyed Ali A1 - Bin Tareaf, Raad A1 - Najafi, Pejman A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - Detect me if you can BT - Spam Bot Detection Using Inductive Representation Learning T2 - Companion Proceedings of The 2019 World Wide Web Conference N2 - Spam Bots have become a threat to online social networks with their malicious behavior, posting misinformation messages and influencing online platforms to fulfill their motives. As spam bots have become more advanced over time, creating algorithms to identify bots remains an open challenge. Learning low-dimensional embeddings for nodes in graph structured data has proven to be useful in various domains. In this paper, we propose a model based on graph convolutional neural networks (GCNN) for spam bot detection. Our hypothesis is that to better detect spam bots, in addition to defining a features set, the social graph must also be taken into consideration. GCNNs are able to leverage both the features of a node and aggregate the features of a node’s neighborhood. We compare our approach, with two methods that work solely on a features set and on the structure of the graph. To our knowledge, this work is the first attempt of using graph convolutional neural networks in spam bot detection. KW - Social Media Analysis KW - Bot Detection KW - Graph Embedding KW - Graph Convolutional Neural Networks Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-4503-6675-5 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3308560.3316504 SP - 148 EP - 153 PB - Association for Computing Machinery CY - New York ER - TY - THES A1 - Ashouri, Mohammadreza T1 - TrainTrap BT - a hybrid technique for vulnerability analysis in JAVA Y1 - 2020 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Everardo Pérez, Flavio Omar A1 - Osorio, Mauricio T1 - Towards an answer set programming methodology for constructing programs following a semi-automatic approach BT - extended and revised version JF - Electronic notes in theoretical computer science N2 - Answer Set Programming (ASP) is a successful rule-based formalism for modeling and solving knowledge-intense combinatorial (optimization) problems. Despite its success in both academic and industry, open challenges like automatic source code optimization, and software engineering remains. This is because a problem encoded into an ASP might not have the desired solving performance compared to an equivalent representation. Motivated by these two challenges, this paper has three main contributions. First, we propose a developing process towards a methodology to implement ASP programs, being faithful to existing methods. Second, we present ASP encodings that serve as the basis from the developing process. Third, we demonstrate the use of ASP to reverse the standard solving process. That is, knowing answer sets in advance, and desired strong equivalent properties, “we” exhaustively reconstruct ASP programs if they exist. This paper was originally motivated by the search of propositional formulas (if they exist) that represent the semantics of a new aggregate operator. Particularly, a parity aggregate. This aggregate comes as an improvement from the already existing parity (xor) constraints from xorro, where lacks expressiveness, even though these constraints fit perfectly for reasoning modes like sampling or model counting. To this end, this extended version covers the fundaments from parity constraints as well as the xorro system. Hence, we delve a little more in the examples and the proposed methodology over parity constraints. Finally, we discuss our results by showing the only representation available, that satisfies different properties from the classical logic xor operator, which is also consistent with the semantics of parity constraints from xorro. KW - answer set programming KW - combinatorial optimization problems KW - parity aggregate operator Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.entcs.2020.10.004 SN - 1571-0661 VL - 354 SP - 29 EP - 44 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam [u.a.] ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hollmann, Susanne A1 - Frohme, Marcus A1 - Endrullat, Christoph A1 - Kremer, Andreas A1 - D’Elia, Domenica A1 - Regierer, Babette A1 - Nechyporenko, Alina T1 - Ten simple rules on how to write a standard operating procedure JF - PLOS Computational Biology N2 - Research publications and data nowadays should be publicly available on the internet and, theoretically, usable for everyone to develop further research, products, or services. The long-term accessibility of research data is, therefore, fundamental in the economy of the research production process. However, the availability of data is not sufficient by itself, but also their quality must be verifiable. Measures to ensure reuse and reproducibility need to include the entire research life cycle, from the experimental design to the generation of data, quality control, statistical analysis, interpretation, and validation of the results. Hence, high-quality records, particularly for providing a string of documents for the verifiable origin of data, are essential elements that can act as a certificate for potential users (customers). These records also improve the traceability and transparency of data and processes, therefore, improving the reliability of results. Standards for data acquisition, analysis, and documentation have been fostered in the last decade driven by grassroot initiatives of researchers and organizations such as the Research Data Alliance (RDA). Nevertheless, what is still largely missing in the life science academic research are agreed procedures for complex routine research workflows. Here, well-crafted documentation like standard operating procedures (SOPs) offer clear direction and instructions specifically designed to avoid deviations as an absolute necessity for reproducibility. Therefore, this paper provides a standardized workflow that explains step by step how to write an SOP to be used as a starting point for appropriate research documentation. Y1 - 2020 VL - 16 IS - 9 PB - PLOS CY - San Francisco ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Stede, Manfred T1 - From connectives to coherence relations BT - a case study of German contrastrive connectives JF - Revue roumaine de linguistique : RRL = Romanian review of linguistics N2 - The notion of coherence relations is quite widely accepted in general, but concrete proposals differ considerably on the questions of how they should be motivated, which relations are to be assumed, and how they should be defined. This paper takes a "bottom-up" perspective by assessing the contribution made by linguistic signals (connectives), using insights from the relevant literature as well as verification by practical text annotation. We work primarily with the German language here and focus on the realm of contrast. Thus, we suggest a new inventory of contrastive connective functions and discuss their relationship to contrastive coherence relations that have been proposed in earlier work. KW - coherence relation KW - connective KW - contrast KW - concession KW - corpus analysis Y1 - 2020 SN - 0035-3957 VL - 65 IS - 3 SP - 213 EP - 233 PB - Ed. Academiei Române CY - Bucureşti ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tiwari, Abhishek A1 - Prakash, Jyoti A1 - Groß, Sascha A1 - Hammer, Christian T1 - A large scale analysis of Android BT - Web hybridization JF - The journal of systems and software N2 - Many Android applications embed webpages via WebView components and execute JavaScript code within Android. Hybrid applications leverage dedicated APIs to load a resource and render it in a WebView. Furthermore, Android objects can be shared with the JavaScript world. However, bridging the interfaces of the Android and JavaScript world might also incur severe security threats: Potentially untrusted webpages and their JavaScript might interfere with the Android environment and its access to native features. No general analysis is currently available to assess the implications of such hybrid apps bridging the two worlds. To understand the semantics and effects of hybrid apps, we perform a large-scale study on the usage of the hybridization APIs in the wild. We analyze and categorize the parameters to hybridization APIs for 7,500 randomly selected and the 196 most popular applications from the Google Playstore as well as 1000 malware samples. Our results advance the general understanding of hybrid applications, as well as implications for potential program analyses, and the current security situation: We discovered thousands of flows of sensitive data from Android to JavaScript, the vast majority of which could flow to potentially untrustworthy code. Our analysis identified numerous web pages embedding vulnerabilities, which we exemplarily exploited. Additionally, we discovered a multitude of applications in which potentially untrusted JavaScript code may interfere with (trusted) Android objects, both in benign and malign applications. KW - Android hybrid apps KW - static analysis KW - information flow control Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2020.110775 SN - 0164-1212 SN - 1873-1228 VL - 170 PB - Elsevier CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bordihn, Henning A1 - Vaszil, György T1 - Deterministic Lindenmayer systems with dynamic control of parallelism JF - International journal of foundations of computer science N2 - M-rate 0L systems are interactionless Lindenmayer systems together with a function assigning to every string a set of multisets of productions that may be applied simultaneously to the string. Some questions that have been left open in the forerunner papers are examined, and the computational power of deterministic M-rate 0L systems is investigated, where also tabled and extended variants are taken into consideration. KW - parallel rewriting KW - Lindenmayer systems KW - restricted parallelism KW - determinism KW - developmental systems KW - formal languages Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1142/S0129054120400031 SN - 0129-0541 SN - 1793-6373 VL - 31 IS - 1 SP - 37 EP - 51 PB - World Scientific CY - Singapore ER - TY - GEN A1 - Hollmann, Susanne A1 - Frohme, Marcus A1 - Endrullat, Christoph A1 - Kremer, Andreas A1 - D’Elia, Domenica A1 - Regierer, Babette A1 - Nechyporenko, Alina T1 - Ten simple rules on how to write a standard operating procedure T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - Research publications and data nowadays should be publicly available on the internet and, theoretically, usable for everyone to develop further research, products, or services. The long-term accessibility of research data is, therefore, fundamental in the economy of the research production process. However, the availability of data is not sufficient by itself, but also their quality must be verifiable. Measures to ensure reuse and reproducibility need to include the entire research life cycle, from the experimental design to the generation of data, quality control, statistical analysis, interpretation, and validation of the results. Hence, high-quality records, particularly for providing a string of documents for the verifiable origin of data, are essential elements that can act as a certificate for potential users (customers). These records also improve the traceability and transparency of data and processes, therefore, improving the reliability of results. Standards for data acquisition, analysis, and documentation have been fostered in the last decade driven by grassroot initiatives of researchers and organizations such as the Research Data Alliance (RDA). Nevertheless, what is still largely missing in the life science academic research are agreed procedures for complex routine research workflows. Here, well-crafted documentation like standard operating procedures (SOPs) offer clear direction and instructions specifically designed to avoid deviations as an absolute necessity for reproducibility. Therefore, this paper provides a standardized workflow that explains step by step how to write an SOP to be used as a starting point for appropriate research documentation. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1201 Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-525877 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bordihn, Henning A1 - Mitrana, Victor T1 - On the degrees of non-regularity and non-context-freeness JF - Journal of computer and system sciences N2 - We study the derivational complexity of context-free and context-sensitive grammars by counting the maximal number of non-regular and non-context-free rules used in a derivation, respectively. The degree of non-regularity/non-context-freeness of a language is the minimum degree of non-regularity/non-context-freeness of context-free/context-sensitive grammars generating it. A language has finite degree of non-regularity iff it is regular. We give a condition for deciding whether the degree of non-regularity of a given unambiguous context-free grammar is finite. The problem becomes undecidable for arbitrary linear context-free grammars. The degree of non-regularity of unambiguous context-free grammars generating non-regular languages as well as that of grammars generating deterministic context-free languages that are not regular is of order Omega(n). Context-free non-regular languages of sublinear degree of non-regularity are presented. A language has finite degree of non-context-freeness if it is context-free. Context-sensitive grammars with a quadratic degree of non-context-freeness are more powerful than those of a linear degree. KW - context-free grammar KW - degree of non-regularity KW - context-sensitive KW - grammar KW - degree of non-context-freeness Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcss.2019.09.003 SN - 0022-0000 SN - 1090-2724 VL - 108 SP - 104 EP - 117 PB - Elsevier CY - San Diego, Calif. [u.a.] ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gebser, Martin A1 - Janhunen, Tomi A1 - Rintanen, Jussi T1 - Declarative encodings of acyclicity properties JF - Journal of logic and computation N2 - Many knowledge representation tasks involve trees or similar structures as abstract datatypes. However, devising compact and efficient declarative representations of such structural properties is non-obvious and can be challenging indeed. In this article, we take a number of acyclicity properties into consideration and investigate various logic-based approaches to encode them. We use answer set programming as the primary representation language but also consider mappings to related formalisms, such as propositional logic, difference logic and linear programming. We study the compactness of encodings and the resulting computational performance on benchmarks involving acyclic or tree structures. KW - acyclicity properties KW - logic-based modeling KW - answer set programming KW - satisfiability Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/logcom/exv063 SN - 0955-792X SN - 1465-363X VL - 30 IS - 4 SP - 923 EP - 952 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Eynsham, Oxford ER - TY - GEN A1 - Xenikoudakis, Georgios A1 - Ahmed, Mayeesha A1 - Harris, Jacob Colt A1 - Wadleigh, Rachel A1 - Paijmans, Johanna L. A. A1 - Hartmann, Stefanie A1 - Barlow, Axel A1 - Lerner, Heather A1 - Hofreiter, Michael T1 - Ancient DNA reveals twenty million years of aquatic life in beavers T2 - Current biology : CB N2 - Xenikoudakis et al. report a partial mitochondrial genome of the extinct giant beaver Castoroides and estimate the origin of aquatic behavior in beavers to approximately 20 million years. This time estimate coincides with the extinction of terrestrial beavers and raises the question whether the two events had a common cause. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2019.12.041 SN - 0960-9822 SN - 1879-0445 VL - 30 IS - 3 SP - R110 EP - R111 PB - Current Biology Ltd. CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gebser, Martin A1 - Maratea, Marco A1 - Ricca, Francesco T1 - The Seventh Answer Set Programming Competition BT - design and results JF - Theory and practice of logic programming N2 - Answer Set Programming (ASP) is a prominent knowledge representation language with roots in logic programming and non-monotonic reasoning. Biennial ASP competitions are organized in order to furnish challenging benchmark collections and assess the advancement of the state of the art in ASP solving. In this paper, we report on the design and results of the Seventh ASP Competition, jointly organized by the University of Calabria (Italy), the University of Genova (Italy), and the University of Potsdam (Germany), in affiliation with the 14th International Conference on Logic Programming and Non-Monotonic Reasoning (LPNMR 2017). KW - Answer Set Programming KW - competition Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S1471068419000061 SN - 1471-0684 SN - 1475-3081 VL - 20 IS - 2 SP - 176 EP - 204 PB - Cambridge Univ. Press CY - Cambridge [u.a.] ER -