Results 1 -
5 of
5
From Information to Knowledge: Harvesting Entities and Relationships from Web Sources
"... There are major trends to advance the functionality of search engines to a more expressive semantic level. This is enabled by the advent of knowledge-sharing communities such as Wikipedia and the progress in automatically extracting entities and relationships from semistructured as well as natural-l ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 7 (4 self)
- Add to MetaCart
There are major trends to advance the functionality of search engines to a more expressive semantic level. This is enabled by the advent of knowledge-sharing communities such as Wikipedia and the progress in automatically extracting entities and relationships from semistructured as well as natural-language Web sources. Recent endeavors of this kind include DBpedia, EntityCube, KnowItAll, ReadTheWeb, and our own YAGO-NAGA project (and others). The goal is to automatically construct and maintain a comprehensive knowledge base of facts about named entities, their semantic classes, and their mutual relations as well as temporal contexts, with high precision and high recall. This tutorial discusses state-ofthe-art methods, research opportunities, and open challenges along this avenue of knowledge harvesting.
Citation author topic model in expert search
- In COLING
, 2010
"... This paper proposes a novel topic model, Citation-Author-Topic (CAT) model that addresses a semantic search task we define as expert search – given a research area as a query, it returns names of experts in this area. For example, Michael Collins would be one of the top names retrieved given the que ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 2 (0 self)
- Add to MetaCart
This paper proposes a novel topic model, Citation-Author-Topic (CAT) model that addresses a semantic search task we define as expert search – given a research area as a query, it returns names of experts in this area. For example, Michael Collins would be one of the top names retrieved given the query Syntactic Parsing. Our contribution in this paper is two-fold. First, we model the cited author information together with words and paper authors. Such extra contextual information directly models linkage among authors and enhances the author-topic association, thus produces more coherent author-topic distribution. Second, we provide a preliminary solution to the task of expert search when the learning repository contains exclusively research related documents authored by the experts. When compared with a previous proposed model (Johri et al., 2010), the proposed model produces high quality author topic linkage and achieves over 33 % error reduction evaluated by the standard MAP measurement. 1
University of Twente at the TREC 2008 Enterprise Track: Using the Global Web
"... as an expertise evidence source This paper describes the details of our participation in expert search task of the TREC 2007 Enterprise track. 1. ..."
Abstract
- Add to MetaCart
as an expertise evidence source This paper describes the details of our participation in expert search task of the TREC 2007 Enterprise track. 1.
Contextual Factors for Finding Similar Experts 1
, 2009
"... Expertise-seeking research studies how people search for expertise and choose whom to contact in the context of a specific task. An important outcome are models that identify factors that influence expert finding. Expertise retrieval addresses the same problem, expert finding, but from a system-cent ..."
Abstract
- Add to MetaCart
Expertise-seeking research studies how people search for expertise and choose whom to contact in the context of a specific task. An important outcome are models that identify factors that influence expert finding. Expertise retrieval addresses the same problem, expert finding, but from a system-centered perspective. The main focus has been on developing content-based algorithms similar to document search. These algorithms identify matching experts primarily on the basis of the textual content of documents with which experts are associated. Other factors, such as the ones identified by expertise-seeking models, are rarely taken into account. In this article, we extend content-based expert-finding approaches with contextual factors that have been found to influence human expert finding. We focus on a task of science

