responsivity
Computational Analysis of Conversation Dynamics through Participant Responsivity
Hughes, Margaret, Roy, Brandon, Poole-Dayan, Elinor, Roy, Deb, Kabbara, Jad
Growing literature explores toxicity and polarization in discourse, with comparatively less work on characterizing what makes dialogue prosocial and constructive. We explore conversational discourse and investigate a method for characterizing its quality built upon the notion of ``responsivity'' -- whether one person's conversational turn is responding to a preceding turn. We develop and evaluate methods for quantifying responsivity -- first through semantic similarity of speaker turns, and second by leveraging state-of-the-art large language models (LLMs) to identify the relation between two speaker turns. We evaluate both methods against a ground truth set of human-annotated conversations. Furthermore, selecting the better performing LLM-based approach, we characterize the nature of the response -- whether it responded to that preceding turn in a substantive way or not. We view these responsivity links as a fundamental aspect of dialogue but note that conversations can exhibit significantly different responsivity structures. Accordingly, we then develop conversation-level derived metrics to address various aspects of conversational discourse. We use these derived metrics to explore other conversations and show that they support meaningful characterizations and differentiations across a diverse collection of conversations.
- Asia > Middle East > UAE > Abu Dhabi Emirate > Abu Dhabi (0.14)
- Asia > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye > Konya Province > Konya (0.04)
- North America > United States > Texas (0.04)
- (13 more...)
- Government (0.93)
- Health & Medicine (0.67)
Counterfactual Analysis of Neural Networks Used to Create Fertilizer Management Zones
Morales, Giorgio, Sheppard, John
In Precision Agriculture, the utilization of management zones (MZs) that take into account within-field variability facilitates effective fertilizer management. This approach enables the optimization of nitrogen (N) rates to maximize crop yield production and enhance agronomic use efficiency. However, existing works often neglect the consideration of responsivity to fertilizer as a factor influencing MZ determination. In response to this gap, we present a MZ clustering method based on fertilizer responsivity. We build upon the statement that the responsivity of a given site to the fertilizer rate is described by the shape of its corresponding N fertilizer-yield response (N-response) curve. Thus, we generate N-response curves for all sites within the field using a convolutional neural network (CNN). The shape of the approximated N-response curves is then characterized using functional principal component analysis. Subsequently, a counterfactual explanation (CFE) method is applied to discern the impact of various variables on MZ membership. The genetic algorithm-based CFE solves a multi-objective optimization problem and aims to identify the minimum combination of features needed to alter a site's cluster assignment. Results from two yield prediction datasets indicate that the features with the greatest influence on MZ membership are associated with terrain characteristics that either facilitate or impede fertilizer runoff, such as terrain slope or topographic aspect.
- Europe > Italy (0.14)
- North America > United States > Montana > Gallatin County > Bozeman (0.04)
- North America > United States > Kentucky (0.04)
- (2 more...)
- Materials > Chemicals > Agricultural Chemicals (1.00)
- Food & Agriculture > Agriculture (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Neural Networks (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Representation & Reasoning > Optimization (0.86)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Statistical Learning > Clustering (0.66)
Counterfactual Explanations of Neural Network-Generated Response Curves
Morales, Giorgio, Sheppard, John
Response curves exhibit the magnitude of the response of a sensitive system to a varying stimulus. However, response of such systems may be sensitive to multiple stimuli (i.e., input features) that are not necessarily independent. As a consequence, the shape of response curves generated for a selected input feature (referred to as "active feature") might depend on the values of the other input features (referred to as "passive features"). In this work, we consider the case of systems whose response is approximated using regression neural networks. We propose to use counterfactual explanations (CFEs) for the identification of the features with the highest relevance on the shape of response curves generated by neural network black boxes. CFEs are generated by a genetic algorithm-based approach that solves a multi-objective optimization problem. In particular, given a response curve generated for an active feature, a CFE finds the minimum combination of passive features that need to be modified to alter the shape of the response curve. We tested our method on a synthetic dataset with 1-D inputs and two crop yield prediction datasets with 2-D inputs. The relevance ranking of features and feature combinations obtained on the synthetic dataset coincided with the analysis of the equation that was used to generate the problem. Results obtained on the yield prediction datasets revealed that the impact on fertilizer responsivity of passive features depends on the terrain characteristics of each field.
- North America > United States > Montana > Gallatin County > Bozeman (0.04)
- North America > United States > Arkansas (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Jordan (0.04)
- Food & Agriculture > Agriculture (1.00)
- Materials > Chemicals > Agricultural Chemicals (0.35)
The Effect of Catecholamines on Performance: From Unit to System Behavior
Servan-Schreiber, David, Printz, Harry, Cohen, Jonathan D.
We present a model of catecholamine effects in a network of neural-like elements. We argue that changes in the responsivity of individual elements do not affect their ability to detect a signal and ignore noise. However. the same changes in cell responsivity in a network of such elements do improve the signal detection performance of the network as a whole. We show how this result can be used in a computer simulation of behavior to account for the effect of eNS stimulants on the signal detection performance of human subjects.
- Health & Medicine > Pharmaceuticals & Biotechnology (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Neurology (0.48)
The Effect of Catecholamines on Performance: From Unit to System Behavior
Servan-Schreiber, David, Printz, Harry, Cohen, Jonathan D.
We present a model of catecholamine effects in a network of neural-like elements. We argue that changes in the responsivity of individual elements do not affect their ability to detect a signal and ignore noise. However. the same changes in cell responsivity in a network of such elements do improve the signal detection performance of the network as a whole. We show how this result can be used in a computer simulation of behavior to account for the effect of eNS stimulants on the signal detection performance of human subjects.
- Health & Medicine > Pharmaceuticals & Biotechnology (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Neurology (0.48)
The Effect of Catecholamines on Performance: From Unit to System Behavior
Servan-Schreiber, David, Printz, Harry, Cohen, Jonathan D.
We present a model of catecholamine effects in a network of neural-like elements. We argue that changes in the responsivity of individual elements do not affect their ability to detect a signal and ignore noise. However. the same changes in cell responsivity in a network of such elements do improve the signal detection performance of the network as a whole. We show how this result can be used in a computer simulation of behavior to account for the effect of eNS stimulants on the signal detection performance of human subjects.
- Health & Medicine > Pharmaceuticals & Biotechnology (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Neurology (0.48)