Communication and information retrieval with a pen-based meeting support tool
CSCW '92 Proceedings of the 1992 ACM conference on Computer-supported cooperative work
FILOCHAT: handwritten notes provide access to recorded conversations
CHI '94 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
A trainable document summarizer
SIGIR '95 Proceedings of the 18th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
SpeechSkimmer: a system for interactively skimming recorded speech
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI) - Special issue on speech as data
Automatic text structuring and summarization
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal - Special issue: methods and tools for the automatic construction of hypertext
Dynomite: a dynamically organized ink and audio notebook
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human factors in computing systems
NoteLook: taking notes in meetings with digital video and ink
MULTIMEDIA '99 Proceedings of the seventh ACM international conference on Multimedia (Part 1)
New Methods in Automatic Extracting
Journal of the ACM (JACM)
Making sharing pervasive: ubiquitous computing for shared note taking
IBM Systems Journal
The audio notebook: paper and pen interaction with structured speech
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The Theory and Practice of Discourse Parsing and Summarization
The Theory and Practice of Discourse Parsing and Summarization
Understanding email interaction increases organizational productivity
Communications of the ACM - Program compaction
Discovering Statistics Using SPSS
Discovering Statistics Using SPSS
Detection of agreement vs. disagreement in meetings: training with unlabeled data
NAACL-Short '03 Proceedings of the 2003 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics on Human Language Technology: companion volume of the Proceedings of HLT-NAACL 2003--short papers - Volume 2
Segmenting meetings into agenda items by extracting implicit supervision from human note-taking
Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
ACL '04 Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Software or wetware?: discovering when and why people use digital prosthetic memory
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Design and evaluation of systems to support interaction capture and retrieval
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing - Special Issue: User-centred design and evaluation of ubiquitous groupware
Detecting Action Items in Meetings
MLMI '08 Proceedings of the 5th international workshop on Machine Learning for Multimodal Interaction
Meta Comments for Summarizing Meeting Speech
MLMI '08 Proceedings of the 5th international workshop on Machine Learning for Multimodal Interaction
A Generic Layout-Tool for Summaries of Meetings in a Constraint-Based Approach
MLMI '08 Proceedings of the 5th international workshop on Machine Learning for Multimodal Interaction
Extrinsic Summarization Evaluation: A Decision Audit Task
MLMI '08 Proceedings of the 5th international workshop on Machine Learning for Multimodal Interaction
Social summarization: does social feedback improve access to speech data?
Proceedings of the 2008 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Improving meeting summarization by focusing on user needs: a task-oriented evaluation
Proceedings of the 14th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
You are what you say: using meeting participants' speech to detect their roles and expertise
ACTS '09 Proceedings of the HLT-NAACL 2006 Workshop on Analyzing Conversations in Text and Speech
Shallow discourse structure for action item detection
ACTS '09 Proceedings of the HLT-NAACL 2006 Workshop on Analyzing Conversations in Text and Speech
Modelling and detecting decisions in multi-party dialogue
SIGdial '08 Proceedings of the 9th SIGdial Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue
Agreement detection in multiparty conversation
Proceedings of the 2009 international conference on Multimodal interfaces
Automatically detecting action items in audio meeting recordings
SigDIAL '06 Proceedings of the 7th SIGdial Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue
The automatic creation of literature abstracts
IBM Journal of Research and Development
Smart meeting systems: A survey of state-of-the-art and open issues
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Detecting the noteworthiness of utterances in human meetings
SIGDIAL '09 Proceedings of the SIGDIAL 2009 Conference: The 10th Annual Meeting of the Special Interest Group on Discourse and Dialogue
Term-weighting for summarization of multi-party spoken dialogues
MLMI'07 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Machine learning for multimodal interaction
Recognition and understanding of meetings
HLT '10 Human Language Technologies: The 2010 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Analysing meeting records: an ethnographic study and technological implications
MLMI'05 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Machine Learning for Multimodal Interaction
INTERACT'05 Proceedings of the 2005 IFIP TC13 international conference on Human-Computer Interaction
Browsing recorded meetings with ferret
MLMI'04 Proceedings of the First international conference on Machine Learning for Multimodal Interaction
A note paper on note-taking: understanding annotations of mobile phone calls
MobileHCI '12 Proceedings of the 14th international conference on Human-computer interaction with mobile devices and services
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This paper reports the results of novel quantitative research on multiple people's personal note-taking in meetings with the long-term aim of aiding the creation of innovative meeting understanding applications. We present three experiments using a large number of group meetings taken from the Augmented Multi-party Interaction meeting corpus. Statistical techniques were employed for this work. Our findings suggest that temporal note-taking overlap information and the semantic content of the written private notes taken by many meeting participants both point to the majority of the most informative meeting events. Thus, the characteristics of note-taking can be seen as a contributing feature for new automatic meeting summarisation approaches and for the development of future meeting browser environments that better support the needs of individuals and organisations.