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Benjamin Matthias Ruppik

Benjamin Matthias Ruppik
  • Doctor of Engineering
  • PostDoc Position at Heinrich-Heine Universität Düsseldorf

About

30
Publications
707
Reads
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69
Citations
Current institution
Heinrich-Heine Universität Düsseldorf
Current position
  • PostDoc Position

Publications

Publications (30)
Preprint
Correct labels are indispensable for training effective machine learning models. However, creating high-quality labels is expensive, and even professionally labeled data contains errors and ambiguities. Filtering and denoising can be applied to curate labeled data prior to training, at the cost of additional processing and loss of information. An a...
Article
Full-text available
We show that for an oriented 4-dimensional Poincaré complex X with finite fundamental group, whose 2-Sylow subgroup is abelian with at most 2 generators, the homotopy type of X is determined by its quadratic 2-type.
Preprint
Full-text available
A common approach for sequence tagging tasks based on contextual word representations is to train a machine learning classifier directly on these embedding vectors. This approach has two shortcomings. First, such methods consider single input sequences in isolation and are unable to put an individual embedding vector in relation to vectors outside...
Preprint
Full-text available
Emotions are indispensable in human communication, but are often overlooked in task-oriented dialogue (ToD) modelling, where the task success is the primary focus. While existing works have explored user emotions or similar concepts in some ToD tasks, none has so far included emotion modelling into a fully-fledged ToD system nor conducted interacti...
Preprint
Full-text available
State-of-the-art task-oriented dialogue systems typically rely on task-specific ontologies for fulfilling user queries. The majority of task-oriented dialogue data, such as customer service recordings, comes without ontology and annotation. Such ontologies are normally built manually, limiting the application of specialised systems. Dialogue ontolo...
Article
Supervised neural approaches are hindered by their dependence on large, meticulously annotated datasets, a requirement that is particularly cumbersome for sequential tasks. The quality of annotations tends to deteriorate with the transition from expert-based to crowd-sourced labeling. To address these challenges, we present CAMEL (Confidence-based...
Article
Full-text available
Task-oriented dialogue systems aid users in achieving their goals for specific tasks, e.g., booking a hotel room or managing a schedule. The systems experience various changes during their lifetime such as new tasks emerging or varying user behaviours and task requests, which requires the ability of continually learning throughout their lifetime. C...
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Emotion recognition in conversations (ERC) is a crucial task for building human-like conversational agents. While substantial efforts have been devoted to ERC for chit-chat dialogues, the task-oriented counterpart is largely left unattended. Directly applying chit-chat ERC models to task-oriented dialogues (ToDs) results in suboptimal performance a...
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We give diagrammatic algorithms for computing the group trisection, homology groups, and intersection form of a closed, orientable, smooth 4-manifold, presented as a branched cover of a bridge-trisected surface in $\mathbb{S}^{4}$. The algorithm takes as input a tri-plane diagram, labelled with permutations according to the Wirtinger relations. We...
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Recent research on dialogue state tracking (DST) focuses on methods that allow few- and zero-shot transfer to new domains or schemas. However, performance gains heavily depend on aggressive data augmentation and fine-tuning of ever larger language model based architectures. In contrast, general purpose language models, trained on large amounts of d...
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Existing user simulators (USs) for task-oriented dialogue systems only model user behaviour on semantic and natural language levels without considering the user persona and emotions. Optimising dialogue systems with generic user policies, which cannot model diverse user behaviour driven by different emotional states, may result in a high drop-off r...
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A correspondence, by way of Heegaard splittings, between closed oriented 3-manifolds and pairs of surjections from a surface group to a free group has been studied by Stallings, Jaco, and Hempel. This correspondence, by way of trisections, was recently extended by Abrams, Gay, and Kirby to the case of smooth, closed, connected, oriented 4-manifolds...
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The untwisting number of a knot K is the minimum number of null-homologous twists required to convert K to the unknot. Such a twist can be viewed as a generalization of a crossing change, since a classical crossing change can be effected by a null-homologous twist on 2 strands. While the unknotting number gives an upper bound on the smooth 4-genus,...
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Goal oriented dialogue systems were originally designed as a natural language interface to a fixed data-set of entities that users might inquire about, further described by domain, slots, and values. As we move towards adaptable dialogue systems where knowledge about domains, slots, and values may change, there is an increasing need to automaticall...
Article
Full-text available
We show that the homotopy type of a finite oriented Poincaré 4 –complex is determined by its quadratic 2 –type provided its fundamental group is finite and has a dihedral Sylow 2 –subgroup. By combining with results of Hambleton and Kreck and Bauer, this applies in the case of smooth oriented 4 –manifolds whose fundamental group is a finite subgrou...
Article
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We consider slice disks for knots in the boundary of a smooth compact 4-manifold X 4 X^{4} . We call a knot K ⊂ ∂ X K \subset \partial X deep slice in X X if there is a smooth properly embedded 2 2 -disk in X X with boundary K K , but K K is not concordant to the unknot in a collar neighborhood ∂ X × I \partial X \times {I} of the boundary. We poin...
Preprint
Full-text available
We show that the homotopy type of an oriented Poincar\'e 4-complex is determined by its quadratic 2-type provided its fundamental group is finite and has a dihedral Sylow 2-subgroup. This applies in the case of smooth oriented 4-manifolds whose fundamental group is a finite subgroup of SO(3), examples of which are elliptic surfaces with finite fund...
Preprint
Full-text available
We consider slice disks for knots in the boundary of a smooth compact 4-manifold $X^{4}$. We call a knot $K \subset \partial X$ deep slice in $X$ if there is a smooth properly embedded 2-disk in $X$ with boundary $K$, but $K$ is not concordant to the unknot in a collar neighborhood $\partial X \times I$ of the boundary. We point out how this concep...
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Full-text available
We compare two naturally arising notions of unknotting number for 2-spheres in the 4-sphere: namely, the minimal number of 1-handle stabilizations needed to obtain an unknotted surface, and the minimal number of Whitney moves required in a regular homotopy to the unknotted 2-sphere. We refer to these invariants as the stabilization number and the C...
Preprint
Full-text available
We show that for an oriented 4-dimensional Poincar\'e complex with finite fundamental group, whose 2-Sylow subgroup is abelian with at most 2 generators, the homotopy type is determined by its quadratic 2-type.

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