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Distance functions and IE -2 William W. Cohen CALD.

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1 Distance functions and IE -2 William W. Cohen CALD

2 Announcements March 25 Thus – talk from Carlos Guestrin (Assistant Prof in Cald as of fall 2004) on max-margin Markov nets –9:30 am in NSH 1507 –open to public - tell your friends! Datasets: –some public extraction data is (I hope readable) on /afs/cs/project/extract-learn/repository Writeups: –nothing today –“distance metrics for text” – three papers - due next Monday, 3/22

3 Record linkage: definition Record linkage: determine if pairs of data records describe the same entity –I.e., find record pairs that are co-referent –Entities: usually people (or organizations or…) –Data records: names, addresses, job titles, birth dates, … Main applications: –Joining two heterogeneous relations –Removing duplicates from a single relation

4 The data integration problem Control flow (modulo details about querying –Extract (author, department) pairs from DB1 –Extract (department,www server) pairs from DB2 –Execute the two-step plan to get paper: author -> department -> wwwServer –two steps means matching (linking, integrating, deduping,....) department names in DB1/DB2 –issues are completely different if user is executing a one-step plan: one-step plan is retrieval

5 String distance metrics: Levenshtein Edit-distance metrics –Distance is shortest sequence of edit commands that transform s to t. –Simplest set of operations: Copy character from s over to t Delete a character in s (cost 1) Insert a character in t (cost 1) Substitute one character for another (cost 1) –This is “Levenshtein distance”

6 Computing Levenshtein distance – 4 D(i,j) = min D(i-1,j-1) + d(si,tj) //subst/copy D(i-1,j)+1 //insert D(i,j-1)+1 //delete COHEN M 1 2345 C 1 2345 C 2 3345 O 3 2 345 H 43 2 3 4 N 5433 3 A trace indicates where the min value came from, and can be used to find edit operations and/or a best alignment (may be more than 1)

7 Smith-Waterman distance - 2 D(i,j) = max 0 //start over D(i-1,j-1) - d(si,tj) //subst/copy D(i-1,j) - G //insert D(i,j-1) - G //delete G = 1 d(c,c) = -2 d(c,d) = +1 COHEN M -2-3-4-5 C 0 0-2-3 C+1 0-2-3 O +2 +1 0 H -2+1 +4+3 +2 N -3 0+3 +5

8 Smith-Waterman distance - 3 D(i,j) = max 0 //start over D(i-1,j-1) - d(si,tj) //subst/copy D(i-1,j) - G //insert D(i,j-1) - G //delete G = 1 d(c,c) = -2 d(c,d) = +1 COHEN M 00000 C 0 0000 C+1 0000 O 0 +2 +1 00 H 0 +4+3 +2 N 0 0+3 +5

9 Smith-Waterman distance - 5 c o h e n d o r f m 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 c 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 c 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 2 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 h 0 1 4 3 2 1 1 1 0 n 0 0 3 3 5 4 3 2 1 s 0 0 2 2 4 4 3 2 1 k 0 0 1 1 3 3 3 2 1 i 0 0 0 0 2 2 2 2 1 dist=5

10 Smith-Waterman distance in Monge & Elkan’s WEBFIND (1996) String s=A 1 A 2... A K, string t=B 1 B 2... B L sim’ is editDistance scaled to [0,1] Monge-Elkan’s “recursive matching scheme” is average maximal similarity of A i to B j:

11 Results: S-W from Monge & Elkan

12 Affine gap distances Smith-Waterman fails on some pairs that seem quite similar: William W. Cohen William W. ‘Don’t call me Dubya’ Cohen Intuitively, a single long insertion is “cheaper” than a lot of short insertions Intuitively, are springlest hulongru poinstertimon extisn’t “cheaper” than a lot of short insertions

13 Affine gap distances - 2 Idea: –Current cost of a “gap” of n characters: nG –Make this cost: A + (n-1)B, where A is cost of “opening” a gap, and B is cost of “continuing” a gap.

14 Affine gap distances - 3 D(i,j) = max D(i-1,j-1) + d(si,tj) //subst/copy D(i-1,j)-1 //insert D(i,j-1)-1 //delete IS(i,j) = max D(i-1,j) - A IS(i-1,j) - B IT(i,j) = max D(i,j-1) - A IT(i,j-1) - B Best score in which si is aligned with a ‘gap’ Best score in which tj is aligned with a ‘gap’ D(i-1,j-1) + d(si,tj) IS(I-1,j-1) + d(si,tj) IT(I-1,j-1) + d(si,tj)

15 Affine gap distances - 4 -B -d(si,tj) D IS IT -d(si,tj) -A

16 Affine gap distances – experiments ( from McCallum,Nigam,Ungar KDD2000) Goal is to match data like this:

17 Affine gap distances – experiments ( from McCallum,Nigam,Ungar KDD2000) Hand-tuned edit distance Lower costs for affine gaps Even lower cost for affine gaps near a “.” HMM-based normalization to group title, author, booktitle, etc into fields (as in Borkar et al)

18 Affine gap distances – experiments TFIDFEdit Distance Cora 0.7510.839 0.721 OrgName10.9250.633 0.3660.950 Orgname20.9580.571 0.7780.912 Restaurant0.9810.827 0.9670.867 Parks0.9760.967

19 TFIDF distance for data integration Experiments with WHIRL

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21 Three ways to deal with output of IE systems Method 1. –Do the best you can at mapping the output into a conventional database (or KR system) with a natural schema (info about people, events, etc) –Answer any questions with the existing DB Method 2. –Given a query, try and see how much the answer can be constrained by information derived from IE (somehow or other –Probably requires some sort of uncertain reasoning.

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33 Birds: r(birdName,soundDescription) and 5 short descriptions of sounds (“an owl hooting”) Movies r(movieName,review) and 5 long, 5 short plot descriptions (“sci-fi comedy”, “serious czech movie”,...)

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35 Soft joins with “incompatible schemas”

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37 WHIRL as a classification-learner

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40 Classification with unlabeled “Background” instances Example: instances are paper titles, background instances are paper abstracts

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42 Very very short examples Very short examples Classifying short newswire headlines

43 Inference in WHIRL “Best-first” search: pick state s that is “best” according to f(s) Suppose graph is a tree, and for all s, s’, if s’ is reachable from s then f(s)>=f(s’). Then A* outputs the globally best goal state s* first, and then next best,...

44 Inference in WHIRL Explode p(X1,X2,X3): find all DB tuples for p and bind Xi to ai. Constrain X~Y: if X is bound to a and Y is unbound, –find DB column C to which Y should be bound –pick a term t in X, find proper inverted index for t in C, and bind Y to something in that index Keep track of t’s used previously, and don’t allow Y to contain one.

45 Inference in WHIRL

46 Summary WHIRL finds the top k answers to a query Queries tend to be easy because either they’re –unconstrained (e.g. 2-way similarity join) => easy to find 100 or so “good” answers –highly constrained (e.g. restricted sim join, multi-way join, classification query,....) => easy to present all the “reasonable” answers to a user Data integration usually considers matching two lists of entity descriptions in the abstract –unconstrained, sometimes under constrained (what is a match to the end user?) – i.e., we don’t know what the final query, and hence final constraints, will turn out to be. –this is evaluated a lot in experiments, but in an ideal world it would not the “wrong” problem


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