Classification of Twitter disaster data using a hybrid feature-instance adaptation approach

Date

2018-05-01

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

Huge amounts of data that are generated on social media during emergency situations are regarded as troves of critical information. The use of supervised machine learning techniques in the early stages of a disaster is challenged by the lack of labeled data for that particular disaster. Furthermore, supervised models trained on labeled data from a prior disaster may not produce accurate results. To address these challenges, domain adaptation approaches, which learn models for predicting the target, by using unlabeled data from the target disaster in addition to labeled data from prior source disasters, can be used. However, the resulting models can still be affected by the variance between the target domain and the source domain.
In this context, we propose to use a hybrid feature-instance adaptation approach based on matrix factorization and the k-nearest neighbors algorithm, respectively. The proposed hybrid adaptation approach is used to select a subset of the source disaster data that is representative of the target disaster. The selected subset is subsequently used to learn accurate supervised or domain adaptation Naïve Bayes classifiers for the target disaster. In other words, this study focuses on transforming the existing source data to bring it closer to the target data, thus overcoming the domain variance which may prevent effective transfer of information from source to target. A combination of selective and transformative methods are used on instances and features, respectively. We show experimentally that the proposed approaches are effective in transferring information from source to target. Furthermore, we provide insights with respect to what types and combinations of selections/transformations result in more accurate models for the target.

Description

Keywords

Tweet classification, Domain adaptation, Matrix factorization, K-nearest neighbors, Disaster response

Graduation Month

May

Degree

Master of Science

Department

Department of Computer Science

Major Professor

Doina Caragea

Date

2018

Type

Thesis

Citation