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As of 2017, DeepDive project is in maintenance mode and no longer under active development. The user community remains active, but the original project members can no longer promise exciting new features/improvements or responding to requests. For the more up-to-date research, please see the Snorkel Project or Ce Zhang's Projects.
DeepDive is a system to extract value from dark data. Like dark matter, dark data is the great mass of data buried in text, tables, figures, and images, which lacks structure and so is essentially unprocessable by existing software. DeepDive helps bring dark data to light by creating structured data (SQL tables) from unstructured information (text documents) and integrating such data with an existing structured database. DeepDive is used to extract sophisticated relationships between entities and make inferences about facts involving those entities. DeepDive helps one process a wide variety of dark data and put the results into a database. With the data in a database, one can use a variety of standard tools that consume structured data; e.g., visualization tools like Tableau or analytics tools like Excel.
DeepDive is a new type of data management system that enables one to tackle extraction, integration, and prediction problems in a single system, which allows users to rapidly construct sophisticated end-to-end data pipelines, such as dark data BI (Business Intelligence) systems. By allowing users to build their system end-to-end, DeepDive allows users to focus on the portion of their system that most directly improves the quality of their application. By contrast, previous pipeline-based systems require developers to build extractors, integration code, and other components—without any clear idea of how their changes improve the quality of their data product. This simple insight is the key to how DeepDive systems produce higher quality data in less time. DeepDive-based systems are used by users without machine learning expertise in a number of domains from paleobiology to genomics to human trafficking; see our showcase for examples.
DeepDive is a trained system that uses machine learning to cope with various forms of noise and imprecision. DeepDive is designed to make it easy for users to train the system through low-level feedback via the Mindtagger interface and rich, structured domain knowledge via rules. DeepDive wants to enable experts who do not have machine learning expertise. One of DeepDive's key technical innovations is the ability to solve statistical inference problems at massive scale.
DeepDive differs from traditional systems in several ways:
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DeepDive asks the developer to think about features—not algorithms. In contrast, other machine learning systems require the developer think about which clustering algorithm, which classification algorithm, etc. to use. In DeepDive's joint inference based approach, the user only specifies the necessary signals or features.
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DeepDive systems can achieve high quality: PaleoDeepDive has higher quality than human volunteers in extracting complex knowledge in scientific domains and winning performance in entity relation extraction competitions.
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DeepDive is aware that data is often noisy and imprecise: names are misspelled, natural language is ambiguous, and humans make mistakes. Taking such imprecision into account, DeepDive computes calibrated probabilities for every assertion it makes. For example, if DeepDive produces a fact with probability 0.9, the fact is 90% likely to be true.
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DeepDive is able to use large amounts of data from a variety of sources. Applications built using DeepDive have extracted data from millions of documents, web pages, PDFs, tables, and figures.
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DeepDive allows developers to use their knowledge of a given domain to improve the quality of the results by writing simple rules that inform the inference (learning) process. DeepDive can also take into account user feedback on the correctness of the predictions to improve the predictions.
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DeepDive is able to use the data to learn "distantly". In contrast, most machine learning systems require tedious training for each prediction. In fact, many DeepDive applications, especially in early stages, need no traditional training data at all!
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DeepDive's secret is a scalable, high-performance inference and learning engine. For the past few years, we have been working to make the underlying algorithms run as fast as possible. The techniques pioneered in this project are part of commercial and open source tools including MADlib, Impala, a product from Oracle, and low-level techniques, such as Hogwild!. They have also been included in Microsoft's Adam and other major web companies.
For more details, check out our papers.
Examples of DeepDive applications are described in our showcase page.
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MEMEX - Supporting the fight against human trafficking, which was recently featured on Forbes and is now actively used by law enforcement agencies.
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PaleoDeepDive - A knowledge base for Paleobiologists with quality higher than human volunteers.
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GeoDeepDive - Extracting dark data from geology journal articles.
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Wisci - Enriching Wikipedia with structured data.
These examples are described in the showcase page. The complete code for these examples is available with DeepDive (where permitted). DeepDive is currently used in other domains with even more collaborators. Stay tuned, and get in touch with us to talk about interesting projects.
Users should be familiar with DDlog or SQL, working with relational databases, and Python to build DeepDive applications or to integrate DeepDive with other tools. A developer who wants to modify and improve DeepDive must have basic background knowledge mentioned in the DeepDive developer's guide.
DeepDive is project led by Christopher Ré at Stanford University. Current group members include: Michael Cafarella, Xiao Cheng, Raphael Hoffman, Dan Iter, Thomas Palomares, Alex Ratner, Theodoros Rekatsinas, Zifei Shan, Jaeho Shin, Feiran Wang, Sen Wu, and Ce Zhang.
- Relation extraction
- Probabilistic inference and factor graphs
- Distant supervision
- DeepDive system overview and terminologies
- Knowledge base construction
- How DeepDive applications are typically developed
- What a DeepDive application looks like
- Writing a DeepDive Application
- Running a DeepDive Application
- Debugging a DeepDive Application
- FAQ
- Using DeepDive in Various Configurations
- Using DeepDive with Various Compute Clusters
- References
- DeepDive Developer's Guide
- Changelog for version 0.8.0-alpha (02/18/2016)
- Changelog for version 0.7.1-alpha (09/28/2015)
- Changelog for version 0.7.0-alpha (07/14/2015)
- Changelog for version 0.6.0-alpha (06/17/2015)
- Changelog for version 0.05-alpha (02/08/2015)
- Changelog for version 0.04.2-alpha (12/23/2014)
- Changelog for version 0.04.1-alpha (11/25/2014)
- Changelog for version 0.04-alpha (11/19/2014)
- Changelog for version 0.03.2-alpha (09/16/2014)
- Changelog for version 0.03.1-alpha (08/15/2014)
- Changelog for version 0.03-alpha (05/07/2014)
- Changelog for version 0.02-alpha (03/12/2014)
We gratefully acknowledge the support of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) XDATA Program under No. FA8750-12-2-0335 and DEFT Program under No. FA8750-13-2-0039, DARPA's MEMEX program, the National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award under No. IIS-1353606 and EarthCube Award under No. ACI-1343760, the Sloan Research Fellowship, the Office of Naval Research (ONR) under awards No. N000141210041 and No. N000141310129, the Moore Foundation, American Family Insurance, CHTC, Google, Lightspeed Ventures, and Toshiba. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of DARPA, AFRL, NSF, ONR, or the U.S. government.