Nteasee: A mixed methods study of expert and general population perspectives on deploying AI for health in African countries
Mercy Nyamewaa Asiedu
Iskandar Haykel
Awa Dieng
K. Kauer
Tousif Ahmed
Florence Ofori
Charisma Chan
Stephen R. Pfohl
Katherine Heller
Nteasee: Understanding Needs in AI for Health in Africa -- A Mixed-Methods Study of Expert and General Population Perspectives
Mercy Nyamewaa Asiedu
Iskandar Haykel
Awa Dieng
K. Kauer
Tousif Ahmed
Florence Ofori
Charisma Chan
Stephen R. Pfohl
Katherine Heller
Artificial Intelligence (AI) for health has the potential to significantly change and improve healthcare. However in most African countries,… (see more) identifying culturally and contextually attuned approaches for deploying these solutions is not well understood. To bridge this gap, we conduct a qualitative study to investigate the best practices, fairness indicators, and potential biases to mitigate when deploying AI for health in African countries, as well as explore opportunities where artificial intelligence could make a positive impact in health. We used a mixed methods approach combining in-depth interviews (IDIs) and surveys. We conduct 1.5-2 hour long IDIs with 50 experts in health, policy, and AI across 17 countries, and through an inductive approach we conduct a qualitative thematic analysis on expert IDI responses. We administer a blinded 30-minute survey with case studies to 672 general population participants across 5 countries in Africa and analyze responses on quantitative scales, statistically comparing responses by country, age, gender, and level of familiarity with AI. We thematically summarize open-ended responses from surveys. Our results find generally positive attitudes, high levels of trust, accompanied by moderate levels of concern among general population participants for AI usage for health in Africa. This contrasts with expert responses, where major themes revolved around trust/mistrust, ethical concerns, and systemic barriers to integration, among others. This work presents the first-of-its-kind qualitative research study of the potential of AI for health in Africa from an algorithmic fairness angle, with perspectives from both experts and the general population. We hope that this work guides policymakers and drives home the need for further research and the inclusion of general population perspectives in decision-making around AI usage.
Reputation Gaming in Crowd Technical Knowledge Sharing
Iren Mazloomzadeh
Gias Uddin
Ashkan Sami
Stack Overflow incentive system awards users with reputation scores to ensure quality. The decentralized nature of the forum may make the in… (see more)centive system prone to manipulation. This paper offers, for the first time, a comprehensive study of the reported types of reputation manipulation scenarios that might be exercised in Stack Overflow and the prevalence of such reputation gamers by a qualitative study of 1,697 posts from meta Stack Exchange sites. We found four different types of reputation fraud scenarios, such as voting rings where communities form to upvote each other repeatedly on similar posts. We developed algorithms that enable platform managers to automatically identify these suspicious reputation gaming scenarios for review. The first algorithm identifies isolated/semi-isolated communities where probable reputation frauds may occur mostly by collaborating with each other. The second algorithm looks for sudden unusual big jumps in the reputation scores of users. We evaluated the performance of our algorithms by examining the reputation history dashboard of Stack Overflow users from the Stack Overflow website. We observed that around 60-80% of users flagged as suspicious by our algorithms experienced reductions in their reputation scores by Stack Overflow.
Advancing EDGE Zones to identify spatial conservation priorities of tetrapod evolutionary history
Sebastian Pipins
Jonathan E. M. Baillie
Alex Bowmer
Nisha Owen
Rikki Gumbs
Advancing EDGE Zones to identify spatial conservation priorities of tetrapod evolutionary history
Sebastian Pipins
Jonathan E. M. Baillie
Alex Bowmer
Nisha Owen
Rikki Gumbs
Online Convex Optimization for On-Board Routing in High-Throughput Satellites
Olivier B'elanger
Jean-Luc Lupien
Olfa Ben Yahia
Stéphane Martel
Gunes Karabulut Kurt
The rise in low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite Internet services has led to increasing demand, often exceeding available data rates and comprom… (see more)ising the quality of service. While deploying more satellites offers a short-term fix, designing higher-performance satellites with enhanced transmission capabilities provides a more sustainable solution. Achieving the necessary high capacity requires interconnecting multiple modem banks within a satellite payload. However, there is a notable gap in research on internal packet routing within extremely high-throughput satellites. To address this, we propose a real-time optimal flow allocation and priority queue scheduling method using online convex optimization-based model predictive control. We model the problem as a multi-commodity flow instance and employ an online interior-point method to solve the routing and scheduling optimization iteratively. This approach minimizes packet loss and supports real-time rerouting with low computational overhead. Our method is tested in simulation on a next-generation extremely high-throughput satellite model, demonstrating its effectiveness compared to a reference batch optimization and to traditional methods.
THInC: A Theory-Driven Framework for Computational Humor Detection
Victor De Marez
Thomas Winters
Humor is a fundamental aspect of human communication and cognition, as it plays a crucial role in social engagement. Although theories about… (see more) humor have evolved over centuries, there is still no agreement on a single, comprehensive humor theory. Likewise, computationally recognizing humor remains a significant challenge despite recent advances in large language models. Moreover, most computational approaches to detecting humor are not based on existing humor theories. This paper contributes to bridging this long-standing gap between humor theory research and computational humor detection by creating an interpretable framework for humor classification, grounded in multiple humor theories, called THInC (Theory-driven Humor Interpretation and Classification). THInC ensembles interpretable GA2M classifiers, each representing a different humor theory. We engineered a transparent flow to actively create proxy features that quantitatively reflect different aspects of theories. An implementation of this framework achieves an F1 score of 0.85. The associative interpretability of the framework enables analysis of proxy efficacy, alignment of joke features with theories, and identification of globally contributing features. This paper marks a pioneering effort in creating a humor detection framework that is informed by diverse humor theories and offers a foundation for future advancements in theory-driven humor classification. It also serves as a first step in automatically comparing humor theories in a quantitative manner.
THInC: A Theory-Driven Framework for Computational Humor Detection
Victor De Marez
Thomas Winters
Humor is a fundamental aspect of human communication and cognition, as it plays a crucial role in social engagement. Although theories about… (see more) humor have evolved over centuries, there is still no agreement on a single, comprehensive humor theory. Likewise, computationally recognizing humor remains a significant challenge despite recent advances in large language models. Moreover, most computational approaches to detecting humor are not based on existing humor theories. This paper contributes to bridging this long-standing gap between humor theory research and computational humor detection by creating an interpretable framework for humor classification, grounded in multiple humor theories, called THInC (Theory-driven Humor Interpretation and Classification). THInC ensembles interpretable GA2M classifiers, each representing a different humor theory. We engineered a transparent flow to actively create proxy features that quantitatively reflect different aspects of theories. An implementation of this framework achieves an F1 score of 0.85. The associative interpretability of the framework enables analysis of proxy efficacy, alignment of joke features with theories, and identification of globally contributing features. This paper marks a pioneering effort in creating a humor detection framework that is informed by diverse humor theories and offers a foundation for future advancements in theory-driven humor classification. It also serves as a first step in automatically comparing humor theories in a quantitative manner.
Audio Editing with Non-Rigid Text Prompts
Francesco Paissan
Zhepei Wang
Paris Smaragdis
In this paper, we explore audio-editing with non-rigid text edits. We show that the proposed editing pipeline is able to create audio edits … (see more)that remain faithful to the input audio. We explore text prompts that perform addition, style transfer, and in-painting. We quantitatively and qualitatively show that the edits are able to obtain results which outperform Audio-LDM, a recently released text-prompted audio generation model. Qualitative inspection of the results points out that the edits given by our approach remain more faithful to the input audio in terms of keeping the original onsets and offsets of the audio events.
Clinical Care Trajectory Assessment of Children with Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia and Neurodevelopmental Impairment
Alexandra Dimmer
Gabriel Altit
Sabrina Beauseigle
Elena Guadagno
Louise Koclas
Katryn Paquette
Ana Sant’Anna
Adam Shapiro
Pramod Puligandla
Data Privacy for Record Linkage and Beyond
Shurong Lin
In a data-driven world, two prominent research problems are record linkage and data privacy, among others. Record linkage is essential for i… (see more)mproving decision-making by integrating information of the same entities from different sources. On the other hand, data privacy research seeks to balance the need to extract accurate insights from data with the imperative to protect the privacy of the entities involved. Inevitably, data privacy issues arise in the context of record linkage. This article identifies two complementary aspects at the intersection of these two fields: (1) how to ensure privacy during record linkage and (2) how to mitigate privacy risks when releasing the analysis results after record linkage. We specifically discuss privacy-preserving record linkage, differentially private regression, and related topics.
Do machine learning methods Make Better predictions in pharmacoepidemiology?
Ana Paula Pena-Gralle
Mireille E. Schnitzer
Sofia-Nada Boureguaa
Félix Morin
Caroline Sirois
Alice Dragomir
Lucie Blais