Christian Wolff Regensburg University, Media Computing FGIR Workshop Hildesheim University, October 2006 Information Retrieval is for Everybody.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
GMD German National Research Center for Information Technology Darmstadt University of Technology Perspectives and Priorities for Digital Libraries Research.
Advertisements

Information Retrieval: Human-Computer Interfaces and Information Access Process.
The Library behind the scene How does it work ? The Library behind the scenes 1 JINR / CERN Grid and advanced information systems 2012 Anne Gentil-Beccot.
Presentation Outline  Project Aims  Introduction of Digital Video Library  Introduction of Our Work  Considerations and Approach  Design and Implementation.
Presentation Outline  Project Aims  Introduction of Digital Video Library  Introduction of Our Work  Considerations and Approach  Design and Implementation.
© Tefko Saracevic, Rutgers University1 digital libraries and human information behavior Tefko Saracevic, Ph.D. School of Communication, Information and.
Information Retrieval: Human-Computer Interfaces and Information Access Process.
© Anselm SpoerriInfo + Web Tech Course Information Technologies Info + Web Tech Course Anselm Spoerri PhD (MIT) Rutgers University
Enterprise social bookmarking - in a community of practice in IBM, Denmark by Joachim Florentz Boye and Marianne Lykke Nielsen Royal School of Library.
© Tefko Saracevic, Rutgers University1 digital libraries and human information behavior Tefko Saracevic, Ph.D. School of Communication, Information and.
What’s new in search? Internet Librarian Oct 29 th 2007.
ICT TEACHERS` COMPETENCIES FOR THE KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY
GL12 Conf. Dec. 6-7, 2010NTL, Prague, Czech Republic Extending the “Facets” concept by applying NLP tools to catalog records of scientific literature *E.
ENHANCING INFORMATION ACCESS AND RETRIEVAL TECHNIQUES TO IMPROVE THE EFFECTIVENESS OF INFORMATION ARCHITECTURE ANUBHA JAIN Research Scholar The IIS University.
CS598CXZ Course Summary ChengXiang Zhai Department of Computer Science University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
Item Web 2.0 application relevant to teacher’s work.
Technology as a Tool in Elementary Guidance Counseling Meghan Moran Click on my picture to see a video greeting! Meghan’s Website:
Comprehensive user education to successfully navigate the Internet Part 1 - Introduction Course developed by University Library of Debrecen.
Christian Wolff Regensburg University, Media Computing FGIR Workshop Hildesheim University, October 2006 Information Retrieval is for Everybody.
Managing your References Sue Bird Bodleian Bio- & Environmental Sciences October 2010.
Shifting Power: A New Information Infrastructure Bonnie Lawlor ICSTI January 15, 2004.
IL Step 1: Sources of Information Information Literacy 1.
1 NAVIGATING INFORMATION RESOURCES IN AGRICULTURE IN ICT ENVIRONMENT Dr. K. VEERANJANEYULU UNIVERSITY LIBRARIAN & CCPI, e-Granth Project Head, University.
Evaluation of Adaptive Web Sites 3954 Doctoral Seminar 1 Evaluation of Adaptive Web Sites Elizabeth LaRue by.
University of Dublin Trinity College Localisation and Personalisation: Dynamic Retrieval & Adaptation of Multi-lingual Multimedia Content Prof Vincent.
Gradual Adaption Model for Estimation of User Information Access Behavior J. Chen, R.Y. Shtykh and Q. Jin Graduate School of Human Sciences, Waseda University,
1 How to find literature - A very short introduction SMED 8004 Medicine and Health Library October 2014.
LIS 506 (Fall 2006) LIS 506 Information Technology Week 11: Digital Libraries & Institutional Repositories.
The New Digital World and the Transformation of Information and Libraries Patricia L. Thibodeau Associate Dean Library Services & Archives Oct. 26, 2011.
MASS DIGITIZATION OF WRITTEN AND DOCUMENTARY HERITAGE, DIGITAL HUMANITIES AND A NEW PARADIGM OF HISTORICAL LIBRARINSHIP Zdeněk Uhlíř National Library of.
Dr. Susan Gauch When is a rock not a rock? Conceptual Approaches to Personalized Search and Recommendations Nov. 8, 2011 TResNet.
Jela Steinerová, Andrea Hrčková Comenius University Bratislava Slovakia 15th International Conference on Grey Literature GL 15.
 Text Representation & Text Classification for Intelligent Information Retrieval Ning Yu School of Library and Information Science Indiana University.
MULTIMEDIA DEFINITION OF MULTIMEDIA
Introducing E-Learning Using Technology in Literacy, Language and Numeracy Teaching 1.1.
1 Information Retrieval Acknowledgements: Dr Mounia Lalmas (QMW) Dr Joemon Jose (Glasgow)
P. Schirmbacher Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin The Changing Process of Scholarly Publishing or the Necessity of a New Culture of Electronic.
D AFFODIL Strategic Support Evaluated Claus-Peter Klas Norbert Fuhr Andre Schaefer University of Duisburg-Essen.
CBSOR,Indian Statistical Institute 30th March 07, ISI,Kokata 1 Digital Repository support for Consortium Dr. Devika P. Madalli Documentation Research &
Knowledge Representation of Statistic Domain For CBR Application Supervisor : Dr. Aslina Saad Dr. Mashitoh Hashim PM Dr. Nor Hasbiah Ubaidullah.
The Role of Metadata in Census Data Dissemination Presented By Mrs. Shirley Christian-Maharaj Assistant Director of Statistics CSO Trinidad &Tobago.
Personalized Interaction With Semantic Information Portals Eric Schwarzkopf DFKI
Tackling the Complexities of Source Evaluation: Active Learning Exercises That Foster Students’ Critical Thinking Juliet Rumble & Toni Carter Auburn University.
WEB MINING. In recent years the growth of the World Wide Web exceeded all expectations. Today there are several billions of HTML documents, pictures and.
Information in the Digital Environment Information Seeking Models Dr. Dania Bilal IS 530 Spring 2005.
Environmental Scanning and Library 2.0 Computers in Libraries 2006 Marianne E. Giltrud May 8, 2006.
Digitization – Basics and Beyond workshop Interoperability of cultural and academic resources New services for digitized collections Muriel Foulonneau.
Modern Information Retrieval Presented by Miss Prattana Chanpolto Faculty of Information Technology.
Introduction to Information Retrieval Example of information need in the context of the world wide web: “Find all documents containing information on computer.
Measuring How Good Your Search Engine Is. *. Information System Evaluation l Before 1993 evaluations were done using a few small, well-known corpora of.
Digital Libraries1 David Rashty. Digital Libraries2 “A library is an arsenal of liberty” Anonymous.
Information Retrieval CSE 8337 Spring 2007 Introduction/Overview Some Material for these slides obtained from: Modern Information Retrieval by Ricardo.
Information Retrieval
E-Humanities in Germany: Some thoughts. (Not just on Germany.) Dr. Max Vögler Libraries and Information Sciences German Research Foundation (DFG)
L&I SCI 110: Information science and information theory Instructor: Xiangming(Simon) Mu Sept. 9, 2004.
Physical and digital – the concept of ”Library 2.0” and Norwegian public libraries Ragnar Nordlie Oslo University College.
Digital Video Library Network Supervisor: Prof. Michael Lyu Student: Ma Chak Kei, Jacky.
SAPIR Search in Audio-Visual Content using P2P Information Retrival For more information visit: Support.
Information Literacy, Search Strategies & Catalog Instruction Frederic Murray Assistant Professor MLIS, University of British Columbia BA, Political Science,
Users´ Behavior and Institutional Repositories Jela Steinerová Comenius University Bratislava
1 June 2013 Engaging users: initiatives and challenges in VNU-HCM Central Library.
INFORMATION STROAGE AND RETRIEVAL SYSTEM By Ms. Preeti Patel Lecturer School of Library And Information Science DAVV, Indore
User Errors in Formulating Queries and IR Techniques to Overcome Them Birger Larsen Information Interaction and Information Architecture Royal School of.
Definition, purposes/functions, elements of IR systems Lesson 1.
Writing a Proposal and Conference Organisation Paul Lewis.
Major ILS disciplines What does iSchools like SILS study?
Federated & Meta Search
American Library Association Online Resource Center
Introduction to Information Retrieval
Presentation transcript:

Christian Wolff Regensburg University, Media Computing FGIR Workshop Hildesheim University, October 2006 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 October 10, 2006, 2 Information Retrieval is for Everybody Overview  Motivation  Development phases in Information Retrieval  Users and information literacy  A storytelling example: A day in the life of the common IRS user  Some observations and implications for IR research  Conclusion

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 Motivation  IRS usage commonplace in everyday life  multimedia and mobile computing call for new IRS application (e.g. GIS, digital photography, ubiquitous network access)  Web 2.0 challenges assumptions on user participation (tagging, user involvement)  exploitation of contextual information new interaction techniques Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 3 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 Phases in IRS Development 1.IRS as instruments of information professionals in mediated communication contexts 2.IRS used by knowledge workers (“end users”) 3.web-based search: IRS used for (almost) anything (desktop setting) 4.“the digitization of the world picture” (Cerruzzi 2003): information systems and IRS are becoming ubiquitous, mobile, context-aware … (phases overlap heavily!) October 10, 2006, 4 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 Users and information literacy  ARD online survey 2005: 60% of the German population regularly use the internet, more than 90% in the group of the 14-19years old  almost 100% of pupils and students have private internet access (small studies with ~300 participants in 2005/2006)  majority of children is familiar with basic internet and search engine concepts  evident deficits in information literacy linguistic phenomena search strategies query languages and operators information quality judgements knowledge about available resources Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 5 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 A storytelling example: IRS in everyday life  In the morning: Collecting music, loading the iPod different genre classifications retrieval by example not viable for many tasks (humming, singing, whistling) problems of describing and classifying music limited portability of licenses no similarity search (see MusicFinder) problem of information management Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 6 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 Example: ID3-Tagging a Music Library Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 7 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 A storytelling example: IRS in everyday life  In the morning  At work: searching for literature  heterogeneous tools and information  different retrieval models and data source characteristics  complex criteria for availability of sources personal information management  limitations of traditional file system structures (monohierarchical)  traditional fulltext retrieval becoming available via desktop search engines (classic VSM paradigm)  advanced techniques (aspect/context/situation awareness, embedded retrieval) missing Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 8 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR Mai 2006, 9 Informationsbeschaffung Matrix of typically available literature access systems FindingAccessing / Ordering books (monographs, edited books) local OPAC, regional catalogs, book sellers („Amazon“) papers (journals, conferences) Integrated DBs (Scopus, Web of science), scince DBs (INSPEC, electronic journal library, publishers‘ dls, integrated portals (vascoda, io-port, …) grey literatureCiteseer, Google Scholar, integrated portals directly online primary research data, software, … Google, specialised dbsonline? (registration?)

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 A storytelling example: IRS in everyday life  In the morning  At work  In the afternoon online shopping  great number of platforms and meta platforms „a colleague‘s visit“: taking (digital) pictures  manyfold media  no content metadata on media production time Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 10 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 „a colleague‘s visit“: no descriptive metadata Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 11 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 A storytelling example: IRS in everyday life  In the morning  At work  In the afternoon  In the evening some time for tagging and picture sorting, querying images in Flickr (media convergence: interactive TV and web-based IS) Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 12 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 What does a typical folder with holiday pictures look like? Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 13 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 14 Information Retrieval is for Everybody „Abendstimmung“

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 A storytelling example: IRS in everyday life  In the morning  At work  In the afternoon  In the evening  At night desktop index is being updated image analysis compares pictures and suggests tags user interaction data are evaluated for further search (the user sleeps) Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 15 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 What is new? - IR and everyday life as objects of science – is this  legitimate? „Information Retrieval (IR) deals with the representation, storage, organization of, and access to information items. The representation and organization of the information items should provide the user with easy access to the information in which he is interested.” (Baeza-Yates & Ribeiro-Neto 1999:1)  different – or just the same research paradigm? different  users (age, training, interests),  situations and contexts,  types of information / data (quality) … Shneiderman‘s „the new computing is about what people can do“ (Sheiderman 2002:2) calls for a scientific approach to computing in everyday life, including IR research Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 16 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006  everybody is an IRS user  the amount of data (files, information knowledge) is growing rapidly (e.g. > items in my Google desktop index)  all media are subject to IR processes - in the media production chain not just search is relevant, but also the descriptive steps (indexing, tagging)  economic, organizational as well as temporal criteria influence effectiveness measures (as compared to traditional effectiveness)  the potential of social software is still quite unclear  text and concept related query paradigm will prevail for a while and for most media  media convergence will gain importance Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 17 Information Retrieval is for Everybody Some theses

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 Some questions …  new evaluation criteria needed? user satisfaction task completion  how do we describe analyse situation, context, interaction history etc.?  how do we fuse different data sources like declarative knowledge (on the user) sensor data … Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 18 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 Conclusion  demand for user-related research information literacy in everyday life  taking IL beyond the library user / student paradigm  the digital divide as a problem not of access to technology but as of a lack of training models  information in everyday life  of future I(R)S  modeling context/situation/experience Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 19 Information Retrieval is for Everybody Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 19

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 Examples: „the knowing camera“  goal: multi-source information collection in digital photography  technology: speech interaction with digital camera for metadata generation sensors for place (GPS), angle/viewpoint (temperature, humidity, biodata …) (machine learning, pattern recognition)  applications enter-/infotainment Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 20 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 Examples: exploring tagging strategies  research questions tagging strategies in  professional sources  social software platforms  method analyzing samples form Flickr / Citeulike building a tag classification content overlap (Citeulike)  meta-tagging tags based on that classification  comparative study: search with / without tagged documents Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 21 Information Retrieval is for Everybody

Hildesheim, October 10, 2006 LWA / FGIR 2006 Some Literature  Baeza-Yates, R., & Ribeiro-Neto, B. (1999). Modern Information Retrieval. Harlow et al. / New York: Addison-Wesley / ACM Press.  Ceruzzi, P. E. (2003). A History of Modern Computing (2nd ed.). Cambridge, MA / London: The MIT Press.  Shneiderman, B. (2002). Leonardo's Laptop: Human Needs and the New Computing Technologies. Cambridge, MA / London: The MIT Press.  van Eimeren, B., & Frees, B. (2005). ARD/ZDF-Online-Studie Nach dem Boom: Größter Zuwachs in internetfernen Gruppen. Media Perspektiven(8/2005), Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 22 Information Retrieval is for Everybody Wolff, Media Computing, Regensburg, 22