• Categories

  • Pages

  • Tags

  • Archives

  • Meta

  • Knowledge-based Information Retrieval with Wikipedia.

    Posted by admin on October 19th, 2009 and filed under knowledge information system | 5 Comments »

    Google Tech Talks
    October 31, 2008

    ABSTRACT

    In knowledge-based information retrieval, search engines consult external sources of knowledge ontologies, taxonomies, thesauri, glossaries, gazeteers to help process the documents they encounter and the requests they receive. The idea is old, obvious, and compelling but results have been singularly unimpressive. The best performing and most widely used search systems are still those that deal in lexical character patterns without using any structured knowledge to understand them.

    Wikipedia is changing all that. This open, constantly evolving encyclopedia represents a vast pool of topics and semantic relations. It is arguably the largest knowledge base humanity has ever seen. At last we have a resource that is (or may be) sufficiently broad, deep, and timely to be applicable to open-domain information retrieval. However, it brings its own challenges. Wikipedia’s haphazard and only partially machine-readable structure bears little resemblance to the carefully crafted knowledge bases that have been used to assist information retrieval in the past.

    This talk will discuss Wikipedia’s promises and shortcomings, and describe ongoing investigations of how best to apply it to organizing and retrieving information.

    Speaker: David Milne
    David Milne is a PhD student at the University of Waikato in New Zealand, where he studies under the supervision of Prof. Ian H. Witten.

    Duration : 0:49:27


    [youtube NFCZuzA4cFc]

    5 Responses

    1. TheGenieNL Says:

      GoNewZealand!
      GoNewZealand!

    2. gconvert Says:

      Very informative …
      Very informative talk

    3. calixtesaint Says:

      Very good …
      Very good presentation-makes so much sense!

    4. devananda777 Says:

      I mean a lecture.
      I mean a lecture.

    5. devananda777 Says:

      This is a good …
      This is a good lesson.Thank you!

    Leave a Comment

    Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.