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  • × author_ss:"Smith, L.C."
  1. Smith, L.C.: Artificial intelligence and information retrieval (1987) 0.03
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    Source
    Annual review of information science and technology. 22(1987), S.41-77
  2. Stvilia, B.; Gasser, L.; Twidale, M.B.; Smith, L.C.: ¬A framework for information quality assessment (2007) 0.02
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    Abstract
    One cannot manage information quality (IQ) without first being able to measure it meaningfully and establishing a causal connection between the source of IQ change, the IQ problem types, the types of activities affected, and their implications. In this article we propose a general IQ assessment framework. In contrast to context-specific IQ assessment models, which usually focus on a few variables determined by local needs, our framework consists of comprehensive typologies of IQ problems, related activities, and a taxonomy of IQ dimensions organized in a systematic way based on sound theories and practices. The framework can be used as a knowledge resource and as a guide for developing IQ measurement models for many different settings. The framework was validated and refined by developing specific IQ measurement models for two large-scale collections of two large classes of information objects: Simple Dublin Core records and online encyclopedia articles.
  3. Smith, L.C.: Reference services (2009) 0.02
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    Source
    Encyclopedia of library and information sciences. 3rd ed. Ed.: M.J. Bates
  4. Stvilia, B.; Twidale, M.B.; Smith, L.C.; Gasser, L.: Information quality work organization in wikipedia (2008) 0.02
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    Abstract
    The classic problem within the information quality (IQ) research and practice community has been the problem of defining IQ. It has been found repeatedly that IQ is context sensitive and cannot be described, measured, and assured with a single model. There is a need for empirical case studies of IQ work in different systems to develop a systematic knowledge that can then inform and guide the construction of context-specific IQ models. This article analyzes the organization of IQ assurance work in a large-scale, open, collaborative encyclopedia - Wikipedia. What is special about Wikipedia as a resource is that the quality discussions and processes are strongly connected to the data itself and are accessible to the general public. This openness makes it particularly easy for researchers to study a particular kind of collaborative work that is highly distributed and that has a particularly substantial focus, not just on error detection but also on error correction. We believe that the study of those evolving debates and processes and of the IQ assurance model as a whole has useful implications for the improvement of quality in other more conventional databases.
  5. Smith, L.C.: "Wholly new forms of encyclopedias" : electronic knowledge in the form of hypertext (1989) 0.01
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    Date
    7. 1.1996 22:47:52
  6. Williams, M.E.; Smith, L.C.: New database products : science, technology and medicine (issue 12) (1998) 0.01
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    Source
    Online and CD-ROM review. 22(1998) no.4, S.263-274