The blackboard model of problem solving
AI Magazine
A knowledge-based approach to the design of document-based retrieval systems
COCS '90 Proceedings of the ACM SIGOIS and IEEE CS TC-OA conference on Office information systems
A generic framework for distributed, cooperating blackboard systems
CSC '90 Proceedings of the 1990 ACM annual conference on Cooperation
CiteSeer: an automatic citation indexing system
Proceedings of the third ACM conference on Digital libraries
Conditional Random Fields: Probabilistic Models for Segmenting and Labeling Sequence Data
ICML '01 Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference on Machine Learning
Automatic document metadata extraction using support vector machines
Proceedings of the 3rd ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
A service-oriented architecture for digital libraries
Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Service oriented computing
OverCite: a cooperative digital research library
IPTPS'05 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Peer-to-Peer Systems
ChemXSeer: a digital library and data repository for chemical kinetics
Proceedings of the ACM first workshop on CyberInfrastructure: information management in eScience
Conceptual recommender system for CiteSeerX
Proceedings of the third ACM conference on Recommender systems
WebApps'10 Proceedings of the 2010 USENIX conference on Web application development
Logical Structure Recovery in Scholarly Articles with Rich Document Features
International Journal of Digital Library Systems
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CiteSeer began as the first search engine for scientific literature to incorporate Autonomous Citation Indexing, and has since grown to be a well-used, open archive for computer and information science publications, currently indexing over 730,000 academic documents. However, CiteSeer currently faces significant challenges that must be overcome in order to improve the quality of the service and guarantee that CiteSeer will continue to be a valuable, up-to-date resource well into the foreseeable future. This paper describes a new architectural framework for CiteSeer system deployment, named CiteSeer Plus. The new framework supports distributed indexing and storage for load balancing and fault-tolerance as well as modular service deployment to increase system flexibility and reduce maintenance costs. In order to facilitate novel approaches to information extraction, a blackboard framework is built into the architecture.