Search (8 results, page 1 of 1)

  • × author_ss:"Salton, G."
  1. Salton, G.; Fox, E.: Extended Boolean information retrieval (1983) 0.03
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    Source
    Communications of the Association for Computing Machinery. 26(1983) no.11, S.1022-1036
  2. Salton, G.; Buckley, C.; Smith, M.: On the application of syntactic methodologies in automatic text analysis (1990) 0.02
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    Source
    Information processing and management. 26(1990) no.1, S.73-92
  3. Salton, G.: ¬The Smart environment for retrieval systeme valuation : advantages and problem areas (1981) 0.02
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    Date
    30.11.1995 20:37:26
  4. Salton, G.: Another look at automatic text-retrieval systems (1986) 0.02
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    Footnote
    Bezugnahme auf: Blair, D.C.: An evaluation of retrieval effectiveness for a full-text document-retrieval system. Comm. ACM 28(1985) S.280-299. - Vgl. auch: Blair, D.C.: Full text retrieval ... Int. Class. 13(1986) S.18-23; Blair, D.C., M.E. Maron: full-text information retrieval ... Inf. Proc. Man. 26(1990) S.437-447.
  5. Buckley, C.; Allan, J.; Salton, G.: Automatic routing and retrieval using Smart : TREC-2 (1995) 0.01
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    Date
    30. 3.2001 13:55:26
  6. Salton, G.; Buckley, C.; Allan, J.: Automatic structuring of text files (1992) 0.01
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    Abstract
    In many practical information retrieval situations, it is necessary to process heterogeneous text databases that vary greatly in scope and coverage and deal with many different subjects. In such an environment it is important to provide flexible access to individual text pieces and to structure the collection so that related text elements are identified and properly linked. Describes methods for the automatic structuring of heterogeneous text collections and the construction of browsing tools and access procedures that facilitate collection use. Illustrates these emthods with searches using a large automated encyclopedia
  7. Salton, G.; Allan, J.; Singhal, A.: Automatic text decomposition and structuring (1996) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Sophisticated text similarity measurements are used to determine relationships between natural language text and text excerpts. The resulting linked hypertext maps can be decomposed into text segments and text theme, and these decompositions are usable to identify different text types and text structures, leading to improved text access and utilization. Gives examples of text decomposition for expository and non expository texts
  8. Salton, G.: Thoughts about modern retrieval technologies (1988) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Paper presented at the 30th Annual Conference of the National Federation of Astracting and Information Services, Philadelphia, 28 Feb-2 Mar 88. In recent years, the amount and the variety of available machine-readable data, new technologies have been introduced, such as high density storage devices, and fancy graphic displays useful for information transformation and access. New approaches have also been considered for processing the stored data based on the construction of knowledge bases representing the contents and structure of the information, and the use of expert system techniques to control the user-system interactions. Provides a brief evaluation of the new information processing technologies, and of the software methods proposed for information manipulation.