We propose a method for discovering the dependency relationships between the topics of documents shared in social networks using the latent social interactions, attempting to answer the question: given a seemingly new topic, from where does this topic evolve? In particular, we seek to discover the pair-wise probabilistic dependency in topics of documents which associate social actors from a latent social network, where these documents are being shared. By viewing the evolution of topics as a Markov chain, we estimate a Markov transition matrix of topics by leveraging social interactions and topic semantics. Metastable states in a Markov chain are applied to the clustering of topics. Applied to the CiteSeer dataset, a collection of documents...
Understanding how research themes evolve over time in a research community is useful in many ways (e...
Previous work in social network analysis (SNA) has modeled the existence of links from one entity to...
Abstract. Who are the most appropriate candidates to receive a call-for-paper or call-for-participat...
Knowing driving factors and understanding researcher behaviors from the dynamics of collaborations o...
In this paper, we study the problem of topic adoption prediction for an author within a social acade...
In this paper, we explore changes in both structural and semantic characteristics of a scientific so...
Abstract. Who are the most appropriate candidates to receive a call-for-paper or call-for-participat...
A major means to encode and share scientific knowledge are publications, which cite each other and w...
Abstract. We present a probabilistic generative model of entity relationships and textual attributes...
Given the proliferation of social media and the abundance of news feeds, a substantial amount of rea...
Previous work in social network analysis (SNA) has modeled the existence of links from one entity to...
In the form of topic discussions, users interact with each other to share knowledge and exchange inf...
We present a probabilistic generative model of entity relationships and textual attributes that simu...
Abstract. We present a probabilistic generative model of entity re-lationships and textual attribute...
Previous work in social network analysis (SNA) has modeled the existence of links from one entity to...
Understanding how research themes evolve over time in a research community is useful in many ways (e...
Previous work in social network analysis (SNA) has modeled the existence of links from one entity to...
Abstract. Who are the most appropriate candidates to receive a call-for-paper or call-for-participat...
Knowing driving factors and understanding researcher behaviors from the dynamics of collaborations o...
In this paper, we study the problem of topic adoption prediction for an author within a social acade...
In this paper, we explore changes in both structural and semantic characteristics of a scientific so...
Abstract. Who are the most appropriate candidates to receive a call-for-paper or call-for-participat...
A major means to encode and share scientific knowledge are publications, which cite each other and w...
Abstract. We present a probabilistic generative model of entity relationships and textual attributes...
Given the proliferation of social media and the abundance of news feeds, a substantial amount of rea...
Previous work in social network analysis (SNA) has modeled the existence of links from one entity to...
In the form of topic discussions, users interact with each other to share knowledge and exchange inf...
We present a probabilistic generative model of entity relationships and textual attributes that simu...
Abstract. We present a probabilistic generative model of entity re-lationships and textual attribute...
Previous work in social network analysis (SNA) has modeled the existence of links from one entity to...
Understanding how research themes evolve over time in a research community is useful in many ways (e...
Previous work in social network analysis (SNA) has modeled the existence of links from one entity to...
Abstract. Who are the most appropriate candidates to receive a call-for-paper or call-for-participat...