approximated provenance for complex applications

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Approximated Provenance for Complex Applications. Susan B. Davidson University of Pennsylvania Eleanor Ainy , Daniel Deutch , Tova Milo Tel Aviv University. Crowd Sourcing . The engagement of crowds of Web users for data procurement and knowledge creation. 2. Why now?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Approximated Provenance for Complex Applications

Susan B. DavidsonUniversity of Pennsylvania

Eleanor Ainy, Daniel Deutch, Tova MiloTel Aviv University

The engagement of crowds of Web users for data procurement and

knowledge creation.

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Crowd Sourcing

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Why now?

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We are all connected, all the time!

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Complexity?

• Many of the initial applications were quite simple– Specify Human Interaction Task (HIT) using e.g.

Mechanical Turk, collect responses, aggregate to form result.

• Newer ideas are multi-phase and complex, e.g. mining frequent fact sets from the crowd (OASSIS)– Model as workflows with global state

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Outline

• “State-of-the-art” in crowd data provenance• New challenges• A proposal for modeling crowd data

provenance

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Outline

• “State-of-the-art” in crowd data provenance• New challenges• A proposal for modeling crowd data

provenance

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Crowd data provenance?• TripAdvisor: aggregates reviews and presents average

ratings– Individual reviews are part of the provenance

• Wikipedia: keeps extensive information about how pages are edited – ID of the user who generated the page as well as changes to

page (when, who, summary) – Provides several views of this information, e.g. by page or by

editor

• Mainly used for presentation and explanation

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Outline

• “State-of-the-art” in crowd data provenance• New challenges• A proposal for modeling crowd data

provenance

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Challenges for crowd data provenance • Complexity of processes and number of user

inputs involved– Provenance can be very large, leading to difficulties in

viewing and understanding provenance• Need for

– Summarization– Multidimensional views– Provenance mining– Compact representation for maintenance and cleaning

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Summarization

• Large size of provenance need for abstraction – E.g., in heavily edited Wikipedia pages:

• “x1, x2, x3 are formatting changes; y1, y2, y3, y4 add content; z1 , z2 represent divergent viewpoints”

• “u1 , u2 , u3 represent edits by robots; v1, v2 represent edits by Wikipedia administrators”

– E.g., in a movie-rating application to summarize the provenance of the average rating for “MatchPoint”

• “Audience crowd members gave higher ratings (8-10) whereas critics gave lower ratings (3-5).”

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Multidimensional Views

• “Perspective” through which provenance can be viewed or mined– E.g. in TripAdvisor, if there is an “outlier” review it

would be useful to see other reviews by that person to “calibrate” it.

– “Question” perspective could show which questions are bad/unclear

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Maintenance and Cleaning

• May need update propagation to remove certain users, questions and/or answers– E.g. spammers or bad questions

• Mining of provenance may lag behind the aggregate calculation– E.g., detecting a spammer may only be possible

when they have answered enough questions, or when enough answers have been obtained from other users.

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Outline

• “State-of-the-art” in crowd data provenance• New challenges• A proposal for modeling crowd data

provenance

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Crowd Sourcing Workflow

Movie reviews Aggregator Platform

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Provenance expression

Propagating provenance annotations through joins

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JOIN (on B)

…a b c …

p

The annotation p * r means joint use of data annotated by p and data annotated by r

…a b c d e p * r

R

R ⋈ S

S

…d b e …

r

A B C

D B E

A B C D E

[Green, Karvounarakis, Tannen, Provenance Semirings. PODS 2007]

Propagating provenance annotations through unions and projections

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…a b c1 p …a b c2 r …a b c3

…s

…a b p + r + s …

+ means alternative use of data, which arises in both PROJECT and UNION.

PROJECT

R A B C

πABR A B

[Green, Karvounarakis, Tannen, Provenance Semirings. PODS 2007]

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Annotated Aggregate Expressions

1 d1 20 p1

2 d1 10 p2

3 d1 15 P3

Q =

REid Dept Sal

select Dept, sum(Sal)from Rgroup by Dept

The sum salary for d1 could be represented by the expression (20 p1 + 10 p2 + 15 p3)⊗ ⊗ ⊗

This provenance aware value “commutes” with deletion.

[Amsterdamer, Deutch, Tannen, Provenance for Aggregate Queries. PODS 2011]

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Provenance expression

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Provenance expression: Benefits

• Can understand how movie ratings were computed.

• Can be used for data maintenance and cleaning– E.g. if U2 is discovered to be a spammer, “map” its

provenance annotation to 0

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Summarizing provenance

• Map annotations to a corresponding “summary”– h: Ann Ann’, where |Ann’| << |Ann|

• E.g. in our example, let– h(Ui)=h(Si)=1, h(Ai)=A, h(Ci)=C– Reducing the expression to

– Which simplifies to

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Constructing mappings?

• How do we define and find “good” mappings?– Provenance size– Semantic constraints (e.g. two annotations can

only be mapped to the same annotation if they come from the same input table)

– Distance between original provenance expression and the mapped expression (e.g. grouping all young French people and giving them an average rating for some movie)

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Conclusions

• Provenance is needed for crowd-sourcing applications to help understand the results and reason about their quality.

• Techniques from database/workflow provenance can be used, but there are special challenges and “opportunities”

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