Mihir arora biography sample paper
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User Profile with Large Language Models: Construction, Updating, and Benchmarking
Nusrat Jahan Prottasha1, Md Kowsher1, Hafijur Raman1, Israt Jahan Anny2
Prakash Bhat3, Ivan Garibay1,
Ozlem Garibay1
1University of Central Florida, USA
2Daffodil International University, Bangladesh
3DotStar Inc
Abstract
User profile modeling plays a key role in personalized systems, as it requires building accurate profiles and updating them with new information. In this paper, we present two high-quality open-source user profile datasets: one for profile construction and another for profile updating. These datasets offer a strong basis for evaluating user profile modeling techniques in dynamic settings. We also show a methodology that uses large language models (LLMs) to tackle both profile construction and updating. Our method uses a probabilistic framework to predict user profiles from input text, allowing for precise and context-aware profile generation. Our experiment
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Sumit Arora: “I am a proper writer and inom write every day”
Oct 03, 2024 08:16 PM IST
On what growing up in a small town taught him, moving to Mumbai at 18 to become a writer, and on writing for a range of successful films and shows including Stree, Dahaad, The Family Man and Jawan
At what age did you decide to become a writer and how did it all happen?
I was born and raised in Meerut. I was into cricket like most Indian boys. Sachin Tendulkar was a big hero and inom wanted to be a cricketer like him. But I realised that inom didn’t have the talent that Sachin had. inom was the captain of my school team but I began doubting that I would ever man it to the state level, let alone the national or international levels. So, then I began thinking that perhaps inom might be talented at something else.
When inom was 14, there was an Indian army camp for kids in Kashmir. I applied for it and got selected. My mother, who was an avid reader, told me to write about my experience. My sister an
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2023–24: Ryan Lackey ($3,000), Annie Foo ($2,000) and Mary Mussman ($1,000)
2022–23: 1st prize: Ryan Lackey ($3,000); 2nd prize: Bryan Jones ($2,000); 3rd prize: Andrew Kiser ($1,000)
2021–22: 1st prize: Ryan Lackey and Mary Mussman ($3000 each); 2nd prize: ($2000)
2020–21: 1st prize: Alex Brostoff ($3000); 2nd prize: Alysu Liu ($2000); 3rd prize: Michael Papias ($1000); 4th prize: Drew Kiser, Landon Iannamico and Roshonda Walker ($500 each)
2019–20: 1st Prize: Rebecca Brunner and Marcelo Garzo ($2000 each); 2nd Prize: Jordan Diac Depasquale and Bryan K Jones ($1000 each); 3rd Prize: Luisa M. Giulianetti, Ryan Lackey, Isaac Engelberg and Laura Marostica ($500 each)
Topic: Confidence Without Attitude
2018–19: 1st prize: Elliott Lewis ($1000 each); Sourabh Harihar, Justin Hudak, Tara Madhav, Max Stevenson, Charlie Tidmarsh ($600 each); 3rd prize: Lily Call, Evan Cui, Rudraveer Vinay Reddy ($200 each)
Topic: The End of Civil Discourse?
2017–18: 1st prize: