日本データベース学会

dbjapanメーリングリストアーカイブ(2013年)

Talk on 20 years of Web Search - Where to Next? by Mark Sanderson, RMIT


データベース学会のみなさま

NIIの神門 典子ともうします。
直前のお知らせで、大変恐縮ですが、明日6月25日(火)の15時〜 
RMIT大学のMark Sanderson教授の講演会を開催します。
ぜひ、奮ってご参加ください

事前申し込みなしの、当日参加も大歓迎ですが、準備の都合上、もし、可能なら、
このメール末尾のフォームで参加申し込みをしていただけると助かります

よろしくお願いいたします

神門 典子

 ====================================================================
DATE/Time:  Tuesday, June 25, 2013:   15:00 - 16:00
Venue:          Room 1904 (19th Floor), NII

Title :     Twenty years of web search – where to next?
Speaker,  Prof. Mark Sanderson, RMIT University, Australia

Abstract. This year, (2013) marks the 20th anniversary of the first public web search engine JumpStation launched in late 1993. For those who were around in those early days, it was becoming clear that an information provision and an information access revolution was on its way; though very few, if any would have predicted the state of the information society we have today. It is perhaps worth reflecting on what has been achieved in the field of information retrieval since these systems were first created, and consider what remains to be accomplished. It is perhaps easy to see the success of systems like Google and ask what else is there to achieve? However, in some ways, Google has it easy. In this talk, I will explain why Web search can be viewed as a relatively easy task and why other forms of search are much harder to perform accurately.

Search engines require a great deal of tuning, currently achieved empirically. The tuning carried out depends greatly on the types of queries submitted to a search engine and the types of document collections the queries will search over. It should be possible to study the population of queries and documents and predictively configure a search engine. However, there is little understanding in either the research or practitioner communities on how query and collection properties map to search engine configurations. I will present the some of the early work we have conducted at RMIT to start charting the problems in this particular space.

Another crucial challenge for search engine companies is how to ensure that users are delivered the best quality content. There is a growth in systems that recommend content based not only on queries, but also on user context. The problem is that the quality of these systems is highly variable; one way of tackling this problem is gathering context from a wider range of places. I will present some of the possible new approaches to providing that context to search engines. Here diverse social media, and advances in location technologies will be emphasized.

Finally, I will describe what I see as one of the more important challenges that face the whole of the information community, namely the penetration of computer systems to virtually every person on the planet and the challenges that such an expansion presents.


About the Speaker:
Mark Sanderson is Professor at RMIT University in the School of Computer Science and Information Technology. He is a researcher in information retrieval (IR) (e.g. web search engines), and  particularly interested in evaluation of search engines, but also work in geographic search, cross language IR (CLIR), summarisation, image retrieval by captions, word sense ambiguity.

Prof. Sanderson has a number of active research projects and a number of research students Editorial, including - Associate Editor of ACM Transactions on the Web and Information Processing and Management;  co-editor of Foundations and Trends in Information Retrieval;  the co-PC Chair of ACM SIGIR 2012. Prof. Sanderson is visiting professor at NII.
http://www.seg.rmit.edu.au/mark/

Academic Host: Noriko Kando, NII
Inquiry:    kando-secr   AT  nii  ac  jp  / Phone 03-4212-2733



==================  参加申し込みフォーム =========================--

2013年6月25日(火) 15:00〜16:00の 講演会に参加します。
講演会テーマ: 20 years of Web Search - Where to Next?
講師: Prof. Mark Sanderson, RMIT

お名前:
ご所属:
Email:
備考:

kando-secr AT  nii.ac.jp  まで、メールでお送りください。

==================================================================
-- 
Noriko Kando
National Institute of Informatics, Japan