https://cis.temple.edu/~jiewu/research/publications/Publication_files/Paper%206190%20Camera%20Ready%20Version.pdf
a major challenge for federated learning in diverse settings. Personalized Federated Learning (PFL), [Tan et al., 2022a] addresses these issues by allowing client-specific models that leverage global insights to enhance local outcomes. The main challenge in PFL lies in balancing global knowledge sharing with preserving client-specific information, making the trade- off an important research ...
https://scholarshare.temple.edu/bitstreams/b1ecc345-7a7c-4776-a366-9b5585e714d6/download
Results: phylotree.js is a library that extends the popular data visualization framework d3.js, and is suitable for building JavaScript applications where users can view and interact with phylogenetic trees. The effects of such interactions can be captured and communicated to other package components, making it possible to engineer complex and responsive applications that include phylogenetic ...
https://cis.temple.edu/~jiewu/research/publications/Publication_files/Paper%206750%20Camera%20Ready%20Version.pdf
1 Introduction Federated learning (FL) [Koneˇcn ́y et al., 2017], a widely-used framework for distributed machine learning, is a signif-icant research focus. Most FL algorithms, such as the clas-sic FedAvg, fall into Synchronous Federated Learning (SFL). They require the server to wait for all selected clients’ lo-cal training and uploads before aggregating updates, and as-sume uniform ...
https://cis.temple.edu/~jiewu/research/publications/Publication_files/WENJUNJIANG2021TWeb.pdf
In online systems, including e-commerce platforms, many users resort to the reviews or comments generated by previous consumers for decision making, while their time is limited to deal with many reviews. Therefore, a review summary, which contains all important features in user-generated reviews, is expected. In this paper, we study “how to generate a comprehensive review summary from a ...
https://cis.temple.edu/~latecki/Courses/CIS2033-Spring12/ElementaryProbabilityforApplications/ch3.pdf
5/36 5 The same result holds if B = “The first die is k” and 2 ≤ k ≤ 6. Carrying this reasoning further, we see that given the outcome lies in A, all five possibilities have the same probability. This should not be surprising. The original probabil-ity is uniform over the 36 possibilities, so when we condition on the occurrence of A, its five outcomes are equally likely.