Corpora: Workshop on The Technology of Browsing Applications

From: Nina Wacholder (nina@cs.columbia.edu)
Date: Wed Jun 06 2001 - 03:38:21 MET DST

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    *********************CALL FOR PARTICIPATION***************

    THE TECHNOLOGY OF BROWSING APPLICATIONS

    Roanoke, Virginia
    June 28, 2001

    Workshop in conjunction with the 2001 Joint Conference on Digital
    Libraries: http://www.jcdl.org/

    *************************************************************

    I. Workshop Description

    The purpose of this workshop is to discuss the technology of phrase
    browsing applications, an approach for providing information seekers with
    access to text content via structured lists of index terms. Browsing
    applications provide users with a preview of the content of a collection
    of documents or of a single document. The index terms, which may be
    identified by a variety of techniques, are phrases that represent
    important concepts referred to in a document or collection of documents.
    The browsing system supports interactive navigation and organization of
    the phrases.

    Browsing systems are distinct from systems based on ontologies because
    phrases are drawn automatically from the text of the collection itself,
    and do not necessarily correspond to taxonomies of the collection content.
    For this reason, phrase-browsing systems can be easily integrated with
    full-text search.

    Issues related to the identification of terms and the development of
    browsing applications, sometimes called phrase browsing, have been
    discussed in the digital library, information retrieval, and natural
    language processing communities (for example, Nevill-Manning et al. 1997;
    Anick and Tipirneni 1999; Wacholder et al. 2000). The usability of
    electronic indexes has also been investigated, for example, by Milstead
    1994 and by Hert et al. 2000.

    To the best of our knowledge there has not yet been a forum that has
    brought researchers from different fields together to discuss browsing
    applications, especially identification of index terms, techniques for
    hierarchical organization of terms, implementation of efficient systems,
    usability of browsing applications, and techniques for evaluating these
    systems. JCDL 2001 provides an excellent venue for doing this.

    II. PROGRAM

    9:00 Welcome. Nina Wacholder, Columbia University, and Craig
    Nevill-Manning, Rutgers University

    9:10 Phrase Hierarchy Inference. Gordon Paynter, University of Waikato,
    Craig Nevill-Manning, Rutgers University, and Ian Witten, University of
    Waikato

    9:35 The Technology of Lexical Navigation. James Cooper, IBM T.J.
    Watson Research Center

    10:00 A Combined Phrase and Thesaurus Browser for Large Document
    Collections. Gordon Paynter, University of Waikato, and Ian Witten,
    University of Waikato

    10:25 5 minute stretch

    10:30 Using Keyphrases to Support Flexible Reading of On-line Documents.
    Steve Jones, University of Waikato

    10:45 The Intell-Index System: Using NLP Techniques to Organize a
    Dynamic Text Browser. Nina Wacholder, Columbia University

    11:00 Break

    11:20 Building Efficient and Effective Phrase Browsers: Technological, NLP
    and Usability Challenges. PANELISTS: Judith Klavans, Columbia University,
    Elizabeth Liddy, Syracuse University, and Craig Nevill-Manning, Rutgers
    University

    12:15 Open Discussion

    1:00 Workshop ends

    Box lunches will be provided at the end of the workshop.

    To register for the Browsing Technology workshop, visit the JCDL '01 Home
    Page: http://www.jcdl.org/

    For more information, contact Nina Wacholder (nina@cs.columbia.edu) or
    Craig Nevill-Manning (craig@nevill-manning.com)



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