The vocabulary problem in human-system communication
Communications of the ACM
Some issues in the indexing of images
Journal of the American Society for Information Science
Access to nonbook materials: the limits of subject indexing for visual and aural languages
Journal of the American Society for Information Science
Automatic thesaurus generation for an electronic community system
Journal of the American Society for Information Science
Topical relevance relationships. II: an exploratory study and preliminary typology
Journal of the American Society for Information Science
Proceedings of the first ACM international conference on Digital libraries
Lexical navigation: visually prompted query expansion and refinement
DL '97 Proceedings of the second ACM international conference on Digital libraries
Deja Vu: a knowledge-rich interface for retrieval in digital libraries
IUI '98 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
The design of knowledge-rich browsing interfaces for retrieval in digital libraries
The design of knowledge-rich browsing interfaces for retrieval in digital libraries
Automated story capture from internet weblogs
Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Knowledge capture
Image retrieval ++--web image retrieval with an enhanced multi-modality ontology
Multimedia Tools and Applications
Learning script knowledge with web experiments
ACL '10 Proceedings of the 48th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
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To support browsing-based subject access to image collections, it is necessary to provide users with networks of subject terms that are organized in an intuitive, richly interconnected manner. A principled approach to this task is to organize the subject terms by their relationship to activity contexts that are commonly understood among users. This article describes a methodology for creating networks of subject terms by manually representing a large number of common-sense activities that are broadly related to image subject terms. The application of this methodology to the Library of Congress Thesaurus for Graphic Materials produced 768 representations that supported users of a prototype browsing-based retrieval system in searching large, indexed photograph collections.