Structuring computer-mediated communication systems to avoid information overload
Communications of the ACM
Intelligent information-sharing systems
Communications of the ACM
How can groups communicate when they use different languages?
COCS '88 Proceedings of the ACM SIGOIS and IEEECS TC-OA 1988 conference on Office information systems
An overview of the Andrew message system
SIGCOMM '87 Proceedings of the ACM workshop on Frontiers in computer communications technology
How do experienced information lens users use rules?
CHI '89 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
A rule-based message filtering system
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
ACM president's letter: electronic junk
Communications of the ACM
Multi-Media Office Filing: The Multos Approach
Multi-Media Office Filing: The Multos Approach
Continuous queries over append-only databases
SIGMOD '92 Proceedings of the 1992 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Using collaborative filtering to weave an information tapestry
Communications of the ACM - Special issue on information filtering
AI*IA'05 Proceedings of the 9th conference on Advances in Artificial Intelligence
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The main goal in the design of intelligent information processing systems is to provide automatic support for the processing of the large amount of documents, today's office workers are confronted with. Existing message filtering systems can provide this support only if the messages to be processed are at least semi-structured.The MAFIA System (MAil-FIlter-Agent) overcomes these limitations of existing message filtering systems by providing an automatic document classification component which recognizes the relevant concepts of weakly structured documents automatically and computes a semantic representation of the document. Using this semantic representation the user is able to specify rules for an effective and content-oriented information processing support.