Garfield County
WavePulse: Real-time Content Analytics of Radio Livestreams
Mittal, Govind, Gupta, Sarthak, Wagle, Shruti, Chopra, Chirag, DeMattee, Anthony J, Memon, Nasir, Ahamad, Mustaque, Hegde, Chinmay
Radio remains a pervasive medium for mass information dissemination, with AM/FM stations reaching more Americans than either smartphone-based social networking or live television. Increasingly, radio broadcasts are also streamed online and accessed over the Internet. We present WavePulse, a framework that records, documents, and analyzes radio content in real-time. While our framework is generally applicable, we showcase the efficacy of WavePulse in a collaborative project with a team of political scientists focusing on the 2024 Presidential Elections. We use WavePulse to monitor livestreams of 396 news radio stations over a period of three months, processing close to 500,000 hours of audio streams. These streams were converted into time-stamped, diarized transcripts and analyzed to track answer key political science questions at both the national and state levels. Our analysis revealed how local issues interacted with national trends, providing insights into information flow. Our results demonstrate WavePulse's efficacy in capturing and analyzing content from radio livestreams sourced from the Web. Code and dataset can be accessed at \url{https://wave-pulse.io}.
- Asia > Middle East > UAE > Abu Dhabi Emirate > Abu Dhabi (0.14)
- North America > United States > New York > Kings County > New York City (0.04)
- North America > United States > Washington > King County > Seattle (0.04)
- (215 more...)
- Media > Radio (1.00)
- Leisure & Entertainment (1.00)
- Government > Voting & Elections (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (1.00)
LexGLUE: A Benchmark Dataset for Legal Language Understanding in English
Chalkidis, Ilias, Jana, Abhik, Hartung, Dirk, Bommarito, Michael, Androutsopoulos, Ion, Katz, Daniel Martin, Aletras, Nikolaos
Laws and their interpretations, legal arguments and agreements\ are typically expressed in writing, leading to the production of vast corpora of legal text. Their analysis, which is at the center of legal practice, becomes increasingly elaborate as these collections grow in size. Natural language understanding (NLU) technologies can be a valuable tool to support legal practitioners in these endeavors. Their usefulness, however, largely depends on whether current state-of-the-art models can generalize across various tasks in the legal domain. To answer this currently open question, we introduce the Legal General Language Understanding Evaluation (LexGLUE) benchmark, a collection of datasets for evaluating model performance across a diverse set of legal NLU tasks in a standardized way. We also provide an evaluation and analysis of several generic and legal-oriented models demonstrating that the latter consistently offer performance improvements across multiple tasks.
- North America > United States > Minnesota > Hennepin County > Minneapolis (0.14)
- North America > United States > Texas > Travis County > Austin (0.14)
- North America > United States > New York > New York County > New York City (0.04)
- (29 more...)
- Law > Government & the Courts (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (1.00)
- Law > Criminal Law (0.92)
- (2 more...)
Technology is influencing how people hear
Digital technology started to have revolutionary effects on hearing aids in 2006. Greg Kuykendall, a managing partner at Kuykendall Hearing Aid Center in Enid, said the rapid development of computer chip technology has had a profound impact on the hearing aid industry. "There have been new improvements every year since 2006," Kuykendall said. "If you remember the old analog hearing aids, they would squeal due to feedback occasionally. In '06, computer chips in hearing aids allowed audiologists to isolate the problem frequency and squelch feedback."