Publications

Automated Data-Driven Generation of Personalized Pedagogical Interventions in Intelligent Tutoring Systems
Ekaterina Kochmar
Dung D. Vu
Robert Belfer
Varun Gupta
Iulian V. Serban
Automated Data-Driven Generation of Personalized Pedagogical Interventions in Intelligent Tutoring Systems
Ekaterina Kochmar
Dung D. Vu
Robert Belfer
Varun Gupta
Iulian V. Serban
Geographical concentration of COVID-19 cases by social determinants of health in 16 large metropolitan areas in Canada - a cross-sectional study
Yiqing Xia
Huiting Ma
Gary Moloney
Héctor A. Velásquez García
Monica Sirski
Naveed Janjua
David Vickers
Tyler Williamson
Alan Katz
Kristy Yu
Rafal Kustra
Marc Brisson
Stefan Baral
Sharmistha Mishra
Mathieu Maheu-Giroux
Background: There is a growing recognition that strategies to reduce SARS-CoV-2 transmission should be responsive to local transmission dyna… (see more)mics. Studies have revealed inequalities along social determinants of health, but little investigation was conducted surrounding geographic concentration within cities. We quantified social determinants of geographic concentration of COVID-19 cases across sixteen census metropolitan areas (CMA) in four Canadian provinces. Methods: We used surveillance data on confirmed COVID-19 cases at the level of dissemination area. Gini (co-Gini) coefficients were calculated by CMA based on the proportion of the population in ranks of diagnosed cases and each social determinant using census data (income, education, visible minority, recent immigration, suitable housing, and essential workers) and the corresponding share of cases. Heterogeneity was visualized using Lorenz (concentration) curves. Results: Geographic concentration was observed in all CMAs (half of the cumulative cases were concentrated among 21-35% of each city's population): with the greatest geographic heterogeneity in Ontario CMAs (Gini coefficients, 0.32-0.47), followed by British Columbia (0.23-0.36), Manitoba (0.32), and Quebec (0.28-0.37). Cases were disproportionately concentrated in areas with lower income, education attainment, and suitable housing; and higher proportion of visible minorities, recent immigrants, and essential workers. Although a consistent feature across CMAs was concentration by proportion visible minorities, the magnitude of concentration by social determinants varied across CMAs. Interpretation: The feature of geographical concentration of COVID-19 cases was consistent across CMAs, but the pattern by social determinants varied. Geographically-prioritized allocation of resources and services should be tailored to the local drivers of inequalities in transmission in response to SARS-CoV-2's resurgence.
Modelling Latent Translations for Cross-Lingual Transfer
Edoardo Ponti
Julia Kreutzer
Ivan Vulic
Dynamic shimming in the cervical spinal cord for multi-echo gradient-echo imaging at 3 T
Eva Alonso‐Ortiz
Daniel Papp
Alain D’astous
Parametric Scattering Networks
Shanel Gauthier
Benjamin Th'erien
Laurent Alséne-Racicot
Michael Eickenberg
The wavelet scattering transform creates geometric in-variants and deformation stability. In multiple signal do-mains, it has been shown to … (see more)yield more discriminative rep-resentations compared to other non-learned representations and to outperform learned representations in certain tasks, particularly on limited labeled data and highly structured signals. The wavelet filters used in the scattering trans-form are typically selected to create a tight frame via a pa-rameterized mother wavelet. In this work, we investigate whether this standard wavelet filterbank construction is op-timal. Focusing on Morlet wavelets, we propose to learn the scales, orientations, and aspect ratios of the filters to produce problem-specific parameterizations of the scattering transform. We show that our learned versions of the scattering transform yield significant performance gains in small-sample classification settings over the standard scat-tering transform. Moreover, our empirical results suggest that traditional filterbank constructions may not always be necessary for scattering transforms to extract effective rep-resentations.
Symptom network analysis of the sleep disorders diagnostic criteria based on the clinical text of the ICSD‐3
Christophe Gauld
Régis Lopez
Charles Morin
Pierre A. GEOFFROY
Julien Maquet
Pierre Desvergnes
Aileen McGonigal
Yves Dauvilliers
Pierre Philip
Jean‐Arthur Micoulaud‐Franchi
Symptom network analysis of the sleep disorders diagnostic criteria based on the clinical text of the ICSD‐3
Christophe Gauld
Régis Lopez
C. Morin
Pierre A. GEOFFROY
Julien Maquet
Pierre Desvergnes
Aileen McGonigal
Yves A. Dauvilliers
Pierre Philip
J-a Micoulaud-franchi
The third edition of the International Classification of Sleep Disorders (ICSD‐3) is the authoritative clinical text for the diagnosis of … (see more)sleep disorders. An important issue of sleep nosology is to better understand the relationship between symptoms found in conventional diagnostic manuals and to compare classifications. Nevertheless, to our knowledge, there is no specific exhaustive work on the general structure of the networks of symptoms of sleep disorders as described in diagnostic manuals. The general aim of the present study was to use symptom network analysis to explore the diagnostic criteria in the ICSD‐3 manual. The ICSD‐3 diagnostic criteria related to clinical manifestations were systematically identified, and the units of analysis (symptoms) were labelled from these clinical manifestation diagnostic criteria using three rules (“Conservation”, “Splitting”, “Lumping”). A total of 37 of the 43 main sleep disorders with 160 units of analysis from 114 clinical manifestations in the ICSD‐3 were analysed. A symptom network representing all individual ICSD‐3 criteria and connections between them was constructed graphically (network estimation), quantified with classical metrics (network inference with global and local measures) and tested for robustness. The global measure of the sleep symptoms network shows that it can be considered as a small world, suggesting a strong interconnection between symptoms in the ICSD‐3. Local measures show the central role of three kinds of bridge sleep symptoms: daytime sleepiness, insomnia, and behaviour during sleep symptoms. Such a symptom network analysis of the ICSD‐3 structure could provide a framework for better systematising and organising symptomatology in sleep medicine.
Design of Hesitation Gestures for Nonverbal Human-Robot Negotiation of Conflicts
Maneezhay Hashmi
H. F. Machiel Van Der Loos
Elizabeth A. Croft
Aude Billard
When the question of who should get access to a communal resource first is uncertain, people often negotiate via nonverbal communication to … (see more)resolve the conflict. What should a robot be programmed to do when such conflicts arise in Human-Robot Interaction? The answer to this question varies depending on the context of the situation. Learning from how humans use hesitation gestures to negotiate a solution in such conflict situations, we present a human-inspired design of nonverbal hesitation gestures that can be used for Human-Robot Negotiation. We extracted characteristic features of such negotiative hesitations humans use, and subsequently designed a trajectory generator (Negotiative Hesitation Generator) that can re-create the features in robot responses to conflicts. Our human-subjects experiment demonstrates the efficacy of the designed robot behaviour against non-negotiative stopping behaviour of a robot. With positive results from our human-robot interaction experiment, we provide a validated trajectory generator with which one can explore the dynamics of human-robot nonverbal negotiation of resource conflicts.
TIE: A Framework for Embedding-based Incremental Temporal Knowledge Graph Completion
Jiapeng Wu
Yishi Xu
Yingxue Zhang
Chen Ma
Reasoning in a temporal knowledge graph (TKG) is a critical task for information retrieval and semantic search. It is particularly challengi… (see more)ng when the TKG is updated frequently. The model has to adapt to changes in the TKG for efficient training and inference while preserving its performance on historical knowledge. Recent work approaches TKG completion (TKGC) by augmenting the encoder-decoder framework with a time-aware encoding function. However, naively fine-tuning the model at every time step using these methods does not address the problems of 1) catastrophic forgetting, 2) the model's inability to identify the change of facts (e.g., the change of the political affiliation and end of a marriage), and 3) the lack of training efficiency. To address these challenges, we present the Time-aware Incremental Embedding (TIE) framework, which combines TKG representation learning, experience replay, and temporal regularization. We introduce a set of metrics that characterizes the intransigence of the model and propose a constraint that associates the deleted facts with negative labels. Experimental results on Wikidata12k and YAGO11k datasets demonstrate that the proposed TIE framework reduces training time by about ten times and improves on the proposed metrics compared to vanilla full-batch training. It comes without a significant loss in performance for any traditional measures. Extensive ablation studies reveal performance trade-offs among different evaluation metrics, which is essential for decision-making around real-world TKG applications.
Parallel and Recurrent Cascade Models as a Unifying Force for Understanding Subcellular Computation
Emerson F. Harkin
Peter R. Shen
Anisha Goel
Richard Naud
Neurons are very complicated computational devices, incorporating numerous non-linear processes, particularly in their dendrites. Biophysica… (see more)l models capture these processes directly by explicitly modelling physiological variables, such as ion channels, current flow, membrane capacitance, etc. However, another option for capturing the complexities of real neural computation is to use cascade models, which treat individual neurons as a cascade of linear and non-linear operations, akin to a multi-layer artificial neural network. Recent research has shown that cascade models can capture single-cell computation well, but there are still a number of sub-cellular, regenerative dendritic phenomena that they cannot capture, such as the interaction between sodium, calcium, and NMDA spikes in different compartments. Here, we propose that it is possible to capture these additional phenomena using parallel, recurrent cascade models, wherein an individual neuron is modelled as a cascade of parallel linear and non-linear operations that can be connected recurrently, akin to a multi-layer, recurrent, artificial neural network. Given their tractable mathematical structure, we show that neuron models expressed in terms of parallel recurrent cascades can themselves be integrated into multi-layered artificial neural networks and trained to perform complex tasks. We go on to discuss potential implications and uses of these models for artificial intelligence. Overall, we argue that parallel, recurrent cascade models provide an important, unifying tool for capturing single-cell computation and exploring the algorithmic implications of physiological phenomena.
Parallel and Recurrent Cascade Models as a Unifying Force for Understanding Subcellular Computation
Emerson F. Harkin
Peter R. Shen
Anisha Goel
Richard Naud
Neurons are very complicated computational devices, incorporating numerous non-linear processes, particularly in their dendrites. Biophysica… (see more)l models capture these processes directly by explicitly modelling physiological variables, such as ion channels, current flow, membrane capacitance, etc. However, another option for capturing the complexities of real neural computation is to use cascade models, which treat individual neurons as a cascade of linear and non-linear operations, akin to a multi-layer artificial neural network. Recent research has shown that cascade models can capture single-cell computation well, but there are still a number of sub-cellular, regenerative dendritic phenomena that they cannot capture, such as the interaction between sodium, calcium, and NMDA spikes in different compartments. Here, we propose that it is possible to capture these additional phenomena using parallel, recurrent cascade models, wherein an individual neuron is modelled as a cascade of parallel linear and non-linear operations that can be connected recurrently, akin to a multi-layer, recurrent, artificial neural network. Given their tractable mathematical structure, we show that neuron models expressed in terms of parallel recurrent cascades can themselves be integrated into multi-layered artificial neural networks and trained to perform complex tasks. We go on to discuss potential implications and uses of these models for artificial intelligence. Overall, we argue that parallel, recurrent cascade models provide an important, unifying tool for capturing single-cell computation and exploring the algorithmic implications of physiological phenomena.