The TREC-5 Confusion Track: Comparing Retrieval Methods for Scanned Text
Information Retrieval
Stuff I've seen: a system for personal information retrieval and re-use
Proceedings of the 26th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in informaion retrieval
The perfect search engine is not enough: a study of orienteering behavior in directed search
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
MyLifeBits: a personal database for everything
Communications of the ACM - Personal information management
What do people recall about their documents?: implications for desktop search tools
Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
Towards memory supporting personal information management tools
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Augmenting human memory using personal lifelogs
Proceedings of the 1st Augmented Human International Conference
Workshop on evaluating personal search
ACM SIGIR Forum
Biometric response as a source of query independent scoring in lifelog retrieval
ECIR'2010 Proceedings of the 32nd European conference on Advances in Information Retrieval
Integrating memory context into personal information re-finding
FDIA'08 Proceedings of the 2nd BCS IRSG conference on Future Directions in Information Access
Design and implementation of a context-based media retrieval system
CVM'12 Proceedings of the First international conference on Computational Visual Media
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Retrieval from personal archives (or Human Digital Memories (HDMs)) is set to become a significant challenge in information retrieval (IR) research. These archives are unique in that the items in them are personal to the owner and as such the owner may have personal memories associated with the items. It is recognized that the harnessing of an individual's memories about HDM items can be used as context data (such as user location at the time of item access) to aid retrieval. We present a pilot study, using one subject's HDM, of remembered context data and its utility in retrieval. Our results explore the types of context data best remembered for different item types and categories over time and show that context appears to become a more important factor in effective HDM IR over time as the subject's recall of contents declines.