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11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Object-Relational Database Applications -- The UC Berkeley Environmental Digital Library University.

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Presentation on theme: "11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Object-Relational Database Applications -- The UC Berkeley Environmental Digital Library University."— Presentation transcript:

1 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Object-Relational Database Applications -- The UC Berkeley Environmental Digital Library University of California, Berkeley School of Information Management and Systems SIMS 257: Database Management

2 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Today Object Relational Database Applications –The Berkeley Digital Library Project Slides from RRL and Robert Wilensky, EECS –Use of DBMS in DL project.

3 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Final Presentations and Reports Specifications for final report are on the Web Site under assignments Presentations (1 on Nov. 28, Others on Nov 30, Dec 5 th and 7 th (Full))

4 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Today Object Relational Applications The UCB Digital Library

5 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Overview What is an Digital Library? Overview of Ongoing Research on Information Access in Digital Libraries

6 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Digital Libraries Are Like Traditional Libraries... Involve large repositories of information (storage, preservation, and access) Provide information organization and retrieval facilities (categorization, indexing) Provide access for communities of users (communities may be as large as the general public or small as the employees of a particular organization)

7 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Originators Libraries Users Traditional Library System

8 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson But Digital Libraries Are Different From Libraries... Not a physical location with local copies; objects held closer to originators Decoupling of storage, organization, access Enhanced Authoring (origination, annotation, support for work groups) Subscription, pay-per-view supported in addition to “free” browsing. Integration into user tasks.

9 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Originators Repositories Users A Digital Library Infrastructure Model Index Services Network

10 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson UC Berkeley Digital Library Project Focus: Work-centered digital information services Testbed: Digital Library for the California Environment Research: Technical agenda supporting user- oriented access to large distributed collections of diverse data types. Part of the NSF/NASA/DARPA Digital Library Initiative (Phases 1 and 2)

11 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson UCB Digital Library Project: Research Organizations UC Berkeley EECS, SIMS, CED, IS&T UCOP Xerox PARC’s Document Image Decoding group and Work Practices group Hewlett-Packard NEC SUN Microsystems IBM Almaden Microsoft Ricoh California Research Philips Research

12 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Collection: Diverse material relevant to California’s key habitats. Users: A consortium of state agencies, development corporations, private corporations, regional government alliances, educational institutions, and libraries. Potential: Impact on state-wide environmental system (CERES ) Testbed: An Environmental Digital Library

13 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson The Environmental Library - Users/Contributors California Resources Agency, California Environment Resources Evaluation System (CERES) California Department of Water Resources The California Department of Fish & Game SANDAG UC Water Resources Center Archives New Partners: CDL and SDSC

14 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson The Environmental Library - Contents Environmental technical reports, bulletins, etc. County general plans Aerial and ground photography USGS topographic maps Land use and other special purpose maps Sensor data “Derived” information Collection data bases for the classification and distribution of the California biota (e.g., SMASCH) Supporting 3-D, economic, traffic, etc. models Videos collected by the California Resources Agency

15 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson The Environmental Library - Contents As of late 2000, the collection represents about one terabyte of data, including over 165,000 digital images, about 300,000 pages of environmental documents, and nearly 2 million records in geographical and botanical databases.

16 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Botanical Data:  The CalFlora Database contains taxonomical and distribution information for more than 8000 native California plants. The Occurrence Database includes over 600,000 records of California plant sightings from many federal, state, and private sources. The botanical databases are linked to our CalPhotos collection of Calfornia plants, and are also linked to external collections of data, maps, and photos.

17 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Geographical Data:  Much of the geographical data in our collection is being used to develop our web-based GIS Viewer. The Street Finder uses 500,000 Tiger records of S.F. Bay Area streets along with the 70,000- records from the USGS GNIS database. California Dams is a database of information about the 1395 dams under state jurisdiction. An additional 11 GB of geographical data represents maps and imagery that have been processed for inclusion as layers in our GIS Viewer. This includes Digital Ortho Quads and DRG maps for the S.F. Bay Area.

18 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Documents:  Most of the 300,000 pages of digital documents are environmental reports and plans that were provided by California state agencies. This collection includes documents, maps, articles, and reports on the California environment including Environmental Impact Reports (EIRs), educational pamphlets, water usage bulletins, and county plans. Documents in this collection come from the California Department of Water Resources (DWR), California Department of Fish and Game (DFG), San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG), and many other agencies. Among the most frequently accessed documents are County General Plans for every California county and a survey of 125 Sacramento Delta fish species.

19 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Documents - cont.  The collection also includes about 20Mb of full-text (HTML) documents from the World Conservation Digital Library. In addition to providing online access to important environmental documents, the document collection is the testbed for our Multivalent Document research.

20 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Testbed Success Stories LUPIN: CERES’ Land Use Planning Information Network –California Country General Plans and other environmental documents. –Enter at Resources Agency Server, documents stored at and retrieved from UCB DLIB server. California flood relief efforts –High demand for some data sets only available on our server (created by document recognition). CalFlora: Creation and interoperation of repositories pertaining to plant biology. Cloning of services at Cal State Library, FBI

21 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Research Highlights Documents –Multivalent Document prototype Page images, structured documents, GIS data, photographs Intelligent Access to Content –Document recognition –Vision-based Image Retrieval: stuff, thing, scene retrieval –Natural Language Processing: categorizing the web, Cheshire II, TileBar Interfaces

22 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Multivalent Documents MVD Model –radically distributed, open, extensible –“behaviors” and “layers” behaviors conform to a protocol suite inter-operation via “IDEG” Applied to “enlivening legacy documents” –various nice behaviors, e.g., lenses

23 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Document Presentation Problem: Digital libraries must deliver digital documents -- but in what form? Different forms have advantages for particular purposes –Retrieval –Reuse –Content Analysis –Storage and archiving Combining forms (Multivalent documents)

24 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Spectrum of Digital Document Representations Adapted from Fox, E.A., et al. “Users, User Interfaces and Objects: Evision, an Electronic Library”, JASIS 44(8), 1993

25 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Document Representation: Multivalent Documents Primary user interface/document model for UCB Digital Library (Wilensky & Phelps) Goal: An approach to new document representations and their authoring. Supports active, distributed, composable transformations of multimedia documents. Enables sophisticated annotations, intelligent result handling, user-modifiable interface, composite documents.

26 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Multivalent Documents Cheshire Layer OCR Layer OCR Mapping Layer History of The Classical World The jsfj sjjhfjs jsjj jsjhfsjf sjhfjksh sshf jsfksfjk sjs jsjfs kj sjfkjsfhskjf sjfhjksh skjfhkjshfjksh jsfhkjshfjkskjfhsfh skjfksjflksjflksjflksf sjfksjfkjskfjskfjklsslk slfjlskfjklsfklkkkdsj ksfksjfkskflk sjfjksf kjsfkjsfkjshf sjfsjfjks ksfjksfjksjfkthsjir\\ ks ksfjksjfkksjkls’ks klsjfkskfksjjjhsjhuu sfsjfkjs Modernjsfj sjjhfjs jsjj jsjhfsjf sslfjksh sshf jsfksfjk sjs jsjfs kj sjfkjsfhskjf sjfhjksh skjfhkjshfjksh jsfhkjshfjkskjfhsfh skjfksjflksjflksjflksf sjfksjfkjskfjskfjklsslk slfjlskfjklsfklkkkdsj GIS Layer taksksh kdjjdkd kdjkdjkd kj sksksk kdkdk kdkd dkk skksksk jdjjdj clclc ldldl taksksh kdjjdkd kdjkdjkd kj sksksk kdkdk kdkd dkk skksksk jdjjdj clclc ldldl Table 1. Table Layer kdk dkd kdk Scanned Page Image Valence: 2: The relative capacity to unite, react, or interact (as with antigens or a biological substrate). Webster’s 7th Collegiate Dictionary Network Protocols & Resources

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29 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson MVD Third Party Work Japanese support by NEC; application to office document management Printing, support for other OCR formats, by HP Chinese character and multilingual lens by UCB Instructional Support staff (Owen McGrath) Automatic enlivening of documents via Transcend proxy.

30 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson MVD Forthcoming Support for XML + style sheets More robust parsing Saving where you want Media adaptors for –Continuous media –Near image formats, word proc. formats Improve authoring tools Interoperation with paper Application versus applet? Release to community, get feedback, iterate.

31 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson GIS in the MVD Framework Layers are georeferenced data sets. Behaviors are –display semi-transparently –pan –zoom –issue query –display context –“spatial hyperlinks” –annotations Written in Java (to be merged with MVD-1 code line?)

32 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson GIS Viewer: Recent Developments Annotation and saving –points, rectangles (w. labels and links), vectors –saving of annotations as separate layer Integration with address, street finding, gazetteer services Application to image viewing: tilePix Castanet client

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36 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson GIS Viewer Example http://elib.cs.berkeley.edu/annotations/gis/buildings.html

37 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Geographic Information: Plans and Ideas More annotations, flexible saving Support for large vector data sets Interoperability –On-the-fly conversion of formats generation of “catalogs” –Via OGDI/GLTP –Experimenting with various CERES servers

38 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Documents: Information from scanned document Built document recognizers for some important documents, e.g. “Bulletin 17”. “TR-9”. Recognized document structure, with order magnitude better OCR. Automatically generated 1395 item dam relational data base. Enabled access via forms, map interfaces. Enable interoperation with image DB.

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42 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Document Recognition: Future Plans Document recognizers: for ~ dozen document types Development and integration of mathematical OCR and recognition. Eventually produce document recognizer generator, i.e., make it easier to write recognizers.

43 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Vision-Based Image Retrieval Stuff-based queries: “blobs” –Basic blobs: colors, sizes, variable number demonstrated utility for interesting queries –“Blob world”: Above plus texture, applied to retrieving similar images successful learning scene classifier Thing-finding: Successfully deployed detectors adding body plans (adding shape, geometry and kinematic constraints) Find objects by grouping coherent low-level properties

44 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Image Retrieval Research Finding “Stuff” vs “Things” BlobWorld Other Vision Research

45 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson (Old “stuff”-based image retrieval: Query)

46 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson (Old “stuff”-based image retrieval: Result)

47 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Blobworld: use regions for retrieval We want to find general objects  Represent images based on coherent regions

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50 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson (“Thing”-based image retrieval using “body plans”: Result)

51 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Natural Language Processing Automatic Topic Assignment Developed automatic categorization/disambiguation method to point where topic assignment (but not disambiguation) appears feasible. Ran controlled experiment: –Took Yahoo as ground truth. –Chose 9 overlapping categories; took 1000 web pages from Yahoo as input. –Result: 84% precision; 48% recall (using top 5 of 1073 categories)

52 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson (Isaac’s Automatically Generated Ontology) IAGO (0.1)! = Yahoo - labor + NLP We categorized (part of) the Web: –1073 categories; 8000 web pages –~80% precision for good categories E.g., “motion pictures”, “the environment”, “music” IAGO 1.0 in the works: –Eliminate pages with little text. –Eliminate proper nouns. –Retrained with MS Encarta - Improved performance dramatically (perhaps enough to disambiguate the web)! –Need to compute word sense priors using the web. –[Recode implementation to keep up with web crawler.]

53 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Cheshire II: Cross-Domain Resource Discovery: Integrated Discovery and Use of Textual, Numeric and Spatial Data Ray R. Larson, PI Kirby Zhang – Yonghui Zhang School of Information Management & Systems University of California, Berkeley ray@sherlock.berkeley.edu Paul Watry, Co-PI Robert Sanderson University of Liverpool Archives and Special Collections P.B.Watry@liverpool.ac.uk

54 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Overview Goals are –Practical application of existing DL technologies to some large-scale cross-domain collections –Theoretical examination and evaluation of next- generation designs for systems architecture and and distributed cross-domain searching for DLs

55 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Current Usage of Cheshire II Web clients for: –Berkeley NSF/NASA/ARPA Digital Library –World Conservation Digital Library –SunSite (UC Berkeley Science Libraries) –University of Liverpool –DeMontfort University (MASTER) –Higher Education Archives Hub Glasgow, Edinburgh, Bath, Liverpool, Kings College London, University College London, Nottingham, Durham, School of Oriental and African Studies, Manchester, Southhampton, Warwick and others (to be expanded) –University of Essex, HDS (part of AHDS) –Oxford Text Archive (test only) –California Sheet Music Project –Cha-Cha (Berkeley Intranet Search Engine) –Berkeley Metadata project cross-language demo –Univ. of Virginia (test implementations) –Use in NESSTAR (NEtworked Social Science Tools and Resources) –Cheshire ranking algorithm is basis for Inktomi

56 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson The Participants NSF/JISC International Digital Library Grant Berkeley working with –University of Liverpool/Manchester Computing –DeMontfort University (MASTER) –Art and Humanities Data Service (http://ahds.ac.uk/) OTA (Oxford), HDS (Essex), PADS (Glasgow), ADS (York), VADS (Surrey & Northumbria) –Consortium of University Research Libraries (CURL) –UC Berkeley Library Making of America II Online Archive of California

57 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Approach For the first goal, we are implementing a distributed search system based on international standards (Z39.50 and SGML/XML) (existing Cheshire II technology) which will be used for cross-domain searching. Databases include: –HE Archives hub – Arts and Humanities Data Service (AHDS) –MASTER –CURL (Consortium of University Research Libraries) –Online Archive of California (OAC) –Making of America II (MOA2)

58 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Approach The second goal will be addressed in the design, development, and evaluation of the distributed information retrieval system architecture, its client-side systems that aid the user in exploiting distributed resources and in the design and evaluation of protocols for efficient and effective retrieval in a internationally distributed multi- database environment. (Cheshire III?)

59 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Research Issues Appropriate system architecture for information retrieval in distributed network environment (distributed object architecture) Management of vocabulary control in a Cross- Domain context Distributed access to existing metadata resources Navigating Collections Support for Cross-Domain resource clumps to facilitate resource discovery

60 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Architecture Overview

61 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Architecture Overview Focus on high performance N.O.W. style operations: A scalable, extensible platform for IR Current design uses JavaSpaces – a high- level coordination mechanism for distributed systems using a light-weight publish/subscribe distributed programming model

62 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Current Design A single operational model for Cheshire that encompasses single node installations, uniformly administered clusters, as well as independently administered federations. –every operation is a distributed operation –an operation is applied over a set of collections

63 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Collections: Single node or cluster –can be partitions of other collections Federation – can be partitions or subsets of other collections. In other words, collections in a loosely coupled federation may have overlapping records Virtual Collections

64 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Virtual Collections The external interface to collections –A VC may only present part of the underlying real collection in its interface –A VC may grow or shrink dynamically within the bounds of the real collection. A search only needs to be done over documents in VC, not all documents in the collection –Ability to logically partition a collection across a number of machines for performance increase, with built in redundancy in the case of node failures. –When a node failures, its VC is simply distributed (logically) to other nodes in the cluster. –Cheshire servers can be organized into server groups. A server group can be thought of as an administrative unit.

65 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Distributed Access to Existing Metadata Resources Use of current (Z39.50) and new (SDLIP) protocols for access to other metadata systems –Support for common semantics (e.g. Dublin Core mappings for disparate systems) –Cross-system use of EVMs

66 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Navigating Collections Support for “drilling down” from broad Collection-level descriptions, to sub- collection descriptions to individual digital objects. –Primary test bases will be EAD collection descriptions linked to digital objects as in MOA2.

67 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Cross-Domain Resource Discovery Initially -- Use of Z39.50 Cross-domain element set for search (Dublin Core based) Support for new protocols and semantics (such as SDLIP) Research into a metaprotocol for communicating information about databases, search elements and collections between systems –Initially based on Z39.50 Explain

68 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Meta-Search for Cross- Domain Resource Discovery Hundreds or Thousands of servers with databases ranging widely in content, topic, format –Broadcast search is expensive in terms of bandwidth and in processing too many irrelevant results –How to select the “best” ones to search? What to search first Which to search next –Topical /domain constraints on the search selections (EVMs for databases?)

69 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Cross-Domain Resource Discovery Meta-Search –New approach to building metasearch based on Z39.50 –Instead of using broadcast search we will explore Extraction of GlOSS-like indexes using Z39.50 SCAN GIPSY2 extraction of place coverages from index data –We will also Investigate How to choose databases using the index How to merge search results from multiple sources Hierarchies of servers (general/meta-topical/individual) –Other methods Treating database contents as distributed objects

70 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Distributed Metadata Servers Replicated servers Meta-Topical Servers General Servers Database Servers

71 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Meta-Search Server Index Creation For all servers, or a topical subset… –Get Explain information (especially DC mappings) –For each index (or each DC index) Use SCAN to extract terms and frequency Add term + freq + source index + database to the meta-search index –Post-Process indexes (especially Geo Names, etc) for special types of data e.g. create “geographical coverage” indexes

72 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Z39.50 SCAN Results % zscan title cat 1 20 1 {SCAN {Status 0} {Terms 20} {StepSize 1} {Position 1}} {cat 27} {cat-fight 1} {catalan 19} {catalogu 37} {catalonia 8} {catalyt 2} {catania 1} {cataract 1} {catch 173} {catch-all 3} {catch-up 2} … zscan topic cat 1 20 1 {SCAN {Status 0} {Terms 20} {StepSize 1} {Position 1}} {cat 706} {cat-and-mouse 19} {cat-burglar 1} {cat-carrying 1} {cat-egory 1} {cat-fight 1} {cat-gut 1} {cat-litter 1} {cat-lovers 2} {cat-pee 1} {cat-run 1} {cat-scanners 1} …

73 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Conclusions A lot of interesting work to be done –Redesign and development of the Cheshire II system –Evaluating new meta-indexing methods –Developing and Evaluating methods for merging cross- domain results (or, perhaps, when to keep them separate) –Developing, Testing and evaluating GIPSY2 –User interface development and testing for distributed resource and object access

74 11/21/2000Database Management -- Spring 1998 -- R. Larson Further Information Berkeley DL web site http://elib.cs.berkeley.edu Full Cheshire II client and server source is available ftp://cheshire.berkeley.edu/pub/cheshire/ –Includes HTML documentation Project Web Site http://cheshire.berkeley.edu/


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