Understanding and Using Context
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
A large scale study of wireless search behavior: Google mobile search
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Geographic information retrieval in a mobile environment: evaluating the needs of mobile individuals
Journal of Information Science
A diary study of mobile information needs
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Geographic relevance in mobile services
Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop on Location and the Web
Mobile information retrieval with search results clustering: Prototypes and evaluations
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Semantic rules for context-aware geographical information retrieval
EuroSSC'09 Proceedings of the 4th European conference on Smart sensing and context
Contextual queries express mobile information needs
Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Human computer interaction with mobile devices and services
Understanding context before using it
CONTEXT'05 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Modeling and Using Context
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Mobile information retrieval is a sub discipline that has been the focus of much research over the last 10-15 years. Drivers of this interest include the emergence of enabling technology, particularly position determining hardware and mobile communications. A second driver has been the increased availability of georeferenced information objects, including points of interest databases and conventions for adding geographic information to documents in a structured way using mark-up languages such as GML, KML, GeoRSS and GeoJSON. In many cases this associated geographic information is a simplistic spatial representation (such as a point), but increasingly commercial implementations are giving consideration to both an object's physical location and its sphere of influence: Google Places, for example. Such georeferenced information objects have the capacity to satisfy the diverse "where", "what" and "when" aspects of queries. As well as the development of enabling technology, there has been widespread acceptance that whilst information needs are ubiquitous, so long as information searches can only be conducted in a small number of static settings, then needs will frequently go unsatisfied [1].