With the continuous application of arsenic-containing chemicals, arsenic pollution in soil has become a serious problem worldwide. The detection of arsenic pollution in soil is of great significance to the protection and restoration of soil. Hyperspectral remote sensing is able to effectively monitor heavy metal pollution in soil. However, due to the possible complex nonlinear relationship between soil arsenic (As) content and the spectrum and data redundancy, an estimation model with high efficiency and accuracy is urgently needed. In response to this situation, 62 samples and 27 samples were collected in Daye and Honghu, Hubei Province, respectively. Spectral measurement and physical and chemical analysis were performed in the laboratory to obtain the As content and spectral reflectance. After the continuum removal (CR) was performed, the stable competitive adaptive reweighting sampling algorithm coupled the successive projections algorithm (sCARS-SPA) was used for characteristic band selection, which effectively solves the problem of data redundancy and collinearity. Partial least squares regression (PLSR), radial basis function neural network (RBFNN), and shuffled frog leaping algorithm optimization of the RBFNN (SFLA-RBFNN) were established in the characteristic wavelengths to predict soil As content. These results show that the sCARS-SPA-SFLA-RBFNN model has the best universality and high prediction accuracy in different land-use types, which is a scientific and effective method for estimating the soil As content.
This paper describes the Duluth system that participated in SemEval-2017 Task 6 #HashtagWars: Learning a Sense of Humor. The system participated in Subtasks A and B using N-gram language models, ranking highly in the task evaluation. This paper discusses the results of our system in the development and evaluation stages and from two post-evaluation runs.
Specific lexical choices in narrative text reflect both the writer's attitudes towards people in the narrative and influence the audience's reactions. Prior work has examined descriptions of people in English using contextual affective analysis, a natural language processing (NLP) technique that seeks to analyze how people are portrayed along dimensions of power, agency, and sentiment. Our work presents an extension of this methodology to multilingual settings, which is enabled by a new corpus that we collect and a new multilingual model. We additionally show how word connotations differ across languages and cultures, highlighting the difficulty of generalizing existing English datasets and methods. We then demonstrate the usefulness of our method by analyzing Wikipedia biography pages of members of the LGBT community across three languages: English, Russian, and Spanish. Our results show systematic differences in how the LGBT community is portrayed across languages, surfacing cultural differences in narratives and signs of social biases. Practically, this model can be used to identify Wikipedia articles for further manual analysis---articles that might contain content gaps or an imbalanced representation of particular social groups.
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