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Improving Suspicious URL Detection through Ensemble Machine Learning Techniques
Published in Neeraj Mohan, Surbhi Gupta, Chuan-Ming Liu, Society 5.0 and the Future of Emerging Computational Technologies, 2022
Sanjukta Mohanty, Arup Abhinna Achary, Laki Sahu
URL refers to the global address of a resource or document. A URL can be divided into four components: a scheme, a host, a path and a query string. A scheme represents the protocol (http, https, ftp, mailto, file etc.) to be used for accessing the information from the internet and to establish secure and smooth communication. A host or domain name (www.yahoo.com) represents the destination location for the URL. A host name consists of subdomain, second-level domain and top-level domain. In Figure 13.1, the term ‘www’ represents the subdomain, the text ‘yahoo’ indicates the domain name and the term ‘com’ represents the top-level domain. The components of domain names are separated by dots and preceded with a double slash. The path name includes the files and directory that represents the location of files in the server and are separated by slashes (/project/test.html). A query string is placed after the path and gives a string of information to the file for some purpose and contains the parameter list, which includes name and value pair (param1=value1). Each query string is preceded by a question mark and separated with an ampersand (&). The components of the URL are represented in Figure 13.1.
Emerging trends and influential outsiders of transportation science
Published in Transportation Letters, 2023
Milad Haghani, Michiel C. J. Bliemer
The main search query string was designed to generate all articles of the journals indexed by the WoS in the ‘Transportation’ category. The official names of the target journals were obtained from the WoS and were separated from one another using the Boolean operator OR while each title placed within quotation marks (see Appendix A). This query string was entered into the Advanced Search section of the WoS by equating it to ‘SO’ which is the WoS search engine code (i.e. Field Tag) for searching the journal/source titles (or more precisely, ‘Publication Name’ as worded by the WoS). No time span or any other constraint was added to the search strategy. This query string search returned N = 49,543 items (conducted in July 2020) and can be used as a standard query to generate transportation articles and keep track of future developments of this literature.