Track 2 in KDD Cup 2013 aims at determining duplicated authors in a data set from Microsoft Academic Search. This type of problems appears in many large-scale applications that compile information from different sources. This paper describes our solution developed at National Taiwan University to win the first prize of the competition. We propose an effective name matching framework and realize two implementations. An important strategy in our approach is to consider Chinese and non-Chinese names separately because of their different naming conventions. Post-processing including merging results of two predictions further boosts the performance. Our approach achieves F1-score 0.99202 on the private leader board, while 0.99195 on the public leader board.
The track 1 problem in KDD Cup 2013 is to discriminate between papers confirmed by the given authors from the other deleted papers. This paper describes the winning solution of team National Taiwan University for track 1 of KDD Cup 2013. First, we conduct the feature engineering to transform the various provided text information into 97 features. Second, we train classification and ranking models using these features. Last, we combine our individual models to boost the performance by using results on the internal validation set and the official Valid set. Some effective post-processing techniques have also been proposed. Our solution achieves 0.98259 MAP score and ranks the first place on the private leaderboard of Test set.
We model multistage competition in supply chains by a sequential game theoretical model in a network. We show the uniqueness of equilibrium for series parallel networks and provide a linear time algorithm to compute the equilibrium. We study the impact of the network structure on the firms' payoffs, the total trade flow, and the overall social welfare.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.