Gupta, Nitin
A Novel Approach to Balance Convenience and Nutrition in Meals With Long-Term Group Recommendations and Reasoning on Multimodal Recipes and its Implementation in BEACON
Nagpal, Vansh, Valluru, Siva Likitha, Lakkaraju, Kausik, Gupta, Nitin, Abdulrahman, Zach, Davison, Andrew, Srivastava, Biplav
In fact, according background in automated recommendations of personalized to a recent meta-survey (Leme et al. 2021), almost meals and then discuss our problem formulation, key solution 40% of the population across high and low-and mediumincome components including data (recipe representation and countries do not adhere to their national food-based format conversion) and meal recommendation, and their dietary guidelines, often prioritizing convenience over nutrition evaluation. We then describe a prototype implementation of needs. Previous studies have shown that adhering the solution in the BEACON system along with the supported to a provided meal plan instead of a self-selected one reduces use cases and conclude with a discussion of practical the risk for adverse health conditions (Metz et al. considerations and avenues for future extensions.
PLANTS: A Novel Problem and Dataset for Summarization of Planning-Like (PL) Tasks
Pallagani, Vishal, Srivastava, Biplav, Gupta, Nitin
Text summarization is a well-studied problem that deals with deriving insights from unstructured text consumed by humans, and it has found extensive business applications. However, many real-life tasks involve generating a series of actions to achieve specific goals, such as workflows, recipes, dialogs, and travel plans. We refer to them as planning-like (PL) tasks noting that the main commonality they share is control flow information. which may be partially specified. Their structure presents an opportunity to create more practical summaries to help users make quick decisions. We investigate this observation by introducing a novel plan summarization problem, presenting a dataset, and providing a baseline method for generating PL summaries. Using quantitative metrics and qualitative user studies to establish baselines, we evaluate the plan summaries from our method and large language models. We believe the novel problem and dataset can reinvigorate research in summarization, which some consider as a solved problem.
Multi-Intent Detection in User Provided Annotations for Programming by Examples Systems
Kumar, Nischal Ashok, Gupta, Nitin, Guttula, Shanmukha, Patel, Hima
In mapping enterprise applications, data mapping remains a fundamental part of integration development, but its time consuming. An increasing number of applications lack naming standards, and nested field structures further add complexity for the integration developers. Once the mapping is done, data transformation is the next challenge for the users since each application expects data to be in a certain format. Also, while building integration flow, developers need to understand the format of the source and target data field and come up with transformation program that can change data from source to target format. The problem of automatic generation of a transformation program through program synthesis paradigm from some specifications has been studied since the early days of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Programming by Example (PBE) is one such kind of technique that targets automatic inferencing of a computer program to accomplish a format or string conversion task from user-provided input and output samples. To learn the correct intent, a diverse set of samples from the user is required. However, there is a possibility that the user fails to provide a diverse set of samples. This can lead to multiple intents or ambiguity in the input and output samples. Hence, PBE systems can get confused in generating the correct intent program. In this paper, we propose a deep neural network based ambiguity prediction model, which analyzes the input-output strings and maps them to a different set of properties responsible for multiple intent. Users can analyze these properties and accordingly can provide new samples or modify existing samples which can help in building a better PBE system for mapping enterprise applications.
Semantic Understanding for Contextual In-Video Advertising
Madhok, Rishi (Delhi Technological University) | Mujumdar, Shashank (IBM Research, India) | Gupta, Nitin (IBM Research, India) | Mehta, Sameep (IBM Research, India)
With the increasing consumer base of online video content, it is important for advertisers to understand the video context when targeting video ads to consumers. To improve the consumer experience and quality of ads, key factors need to be considered such as (i) ad relevance to video content (ii) where and how video ads are placed, and (iii) non-intrusive user experience. We propose a framework to semantically understand the video content for better ad recommendation that ensure these criteria.