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[Author] Chaima DHAHRI(2hit)

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  • Upcoming Mood Prediction Using Public Online Social Networks Data: Analysis over Cyber-Social-Physical Dimension

    Chaima DHAHRI  Kazunori MATSUMOTO  Keiichiro HOASHI  

     
    PAPER-Emotional Information Processing

      Pubricized:
    2019/06/21
      Vol:
    E102-D No:9
      Page(s):
    1625-1634

    Upcoming mood prediction plays an important role in different topics such as bipolar depression disorder in psychology and quality-of-life and recommendations on health-related quality of life research. The mood in this study is defined as the general emotional state of a user. In contrast to emotions which is more specific and varying within a day, the mood is described as having either a positive or negative valence[1]. We propose an autonomous system that predicts the upcoming user mood based on their online activities over cyber, social and physical spaces without using extra-devices and sensors. Recently, many researchers have relied on online social networks (OSNs) to detect user mood. However, all the existing works focused on inferring the current mood and only few works have focused on predicting the upcoming mood. For this reason, we define a new goal of predicting the upcoming mood. We, first, collected ground truth data during two months from 383 subjects. Then, we studied the correlation between extracted features and user's mood. Finally, we used these features to train two predictive systems: generalized and personalized. The results suggest a statistically significant correlation between tomorrow's mood and today's activities on OSNs, which can be used to develop a decent predictive system with an average accuracy of 70% and a recall of 75% for the correlated users. This performance was increased to an average accuracy of 79% and a recall of 80% for active users who have more than 30 days of history data. Moreover, we showed that, for non-active users, referring to a generalized system can be a solution to compensate the lack of data at the early stage of the system, but when enough data for each user is available, a personalized system is used to individually predict the upcoming mood.

  • Adaptive Q-Learning Cell Selection Method for Open-Access Femtocell Networks: Multi-User Case

    Chaima DHAHRI  Tomoaki OHTSUKI  

     
    PAPER-Network Management/Operation

      Vol:
    E97-B No:8
      Page(s):
    1679-1688

    Open-access femtocell networks assure the cellular user of getting a better and stronger signal. However, due to the small range of femto base stations (FBSs), any motion of the user may trigger handover. In a dense environment, the possibility of such handover is very frequent. To avoid frequent communication disruptions due to phenomena such as the ping-pong effect, it is necessary to ensure the effectiveness of the cell selection method. Existing selection methods commonly uses a measured channel/cell quality metric such as the channel capacity (between the user and the target cell). However, the throughput experienced by the user is time-varying because of the channel condition, i.e., owing to the propagation effects or receiver location. In this context, the conventional approach does not reflect the future performance. To ensure the efficiency of cell selection, user's decision needs to depend not only on the current state of the network, but also on the future possible states (horizon). To this end, we implement a learning algorithm that can predict, based on the past experience, the best performing cell in the future. We present in this paper a reinforcement learning (RL) framework as a generic solution for the cell selection problem in a non-stationary femtocell network that selects, without prior knowledge about the environment, a target cell by exploring past cells' behavior and predicting their potential future states based on Q-learning algorithm. Then, we extend this proposal by referring to a fuzzy inference system (FIS) to tune Q-learning parameters during the learning process to adapt to environment changes. Our solution aims at minimizing the frequency of handovers without affecting the user experience in terms of channel capacity. Simulation results demonstrate that· our solution comes very close to the performance of the opportunistic method in terms of capacity, while fewer handovers are required on average.· the use of fuzzy rules achieves better performance in terms of received reward (capacity) and number of handovers than fixing the values of Q-learning parameters.