Theoretical Aspects of Schema Merging
EDBT '92 Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Extending Database Technology: Advances in Database Technology
Statistical schema matching across web query interfaces
Proceedings of the 2003 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Light-weight domain-based form assistant: querying web databases on the fly
VLDB '05 Proceedings of the 31st international conference on Very large data bases
WebIQ: Learning from the Web to Match Deep-Web Query Interfaces
ICDE '06 Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Data Engineering
Merging Source Query Interfaces onWeb Databases
ICDE '06 Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Data Engineering
Meaningful labeling of integrated query interfaces
VLDB '06 Proceedings of the 32nd international conference on Very large data bases
Wise-integrator: an automatic integrator of web search interfaces for E-commerce
VLDB '03 Proceedings of the 29th international conference on Very large data bases - Volume 29
Merging models based on given correspondences
VLDB '03 Proceedings of the 29th international conference on Very large data bases - Volume 29
Instance-based schema matching for web databases by domain-specific query probing
VLDB '04 Proceedings of the Thirtieth international conference on Very large data bases - Volume 30
A hierarchical approach to model web query interfaces for web source integration
Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment
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Given a set of query interfaces from providers in the same domain (e.g., car rental), the goal is to build automatically an integrated interface that makes the access to individual sources transparent to users. Our goal is to allow users to choose their preferred providers. Consequently, the integrated interface should reflect only the query interfaces of these sources. The problem scrutinized in this work is deriving customized integrated interfaces. On the hypothesis that query interfaces on the Web are easily understood by ordinary users (well-designed assumption), mainly because of the way their attributes are organized (structural property) and named (lexical property), we develop algorithms to construct customized integrated interfaces. Experiments are performed to validate our analytical studies, including a user survey.