An introduction to genetic algorithms
An introduction to genetic algorithms
Communication and computing for distributed multimedia systems
Communication and computing for distributed multimedia systems
Empirical studies in multimedia information retrieval
Intelligent multimedia information retrieval
Combinatorial algorithms: generation, enumeration, and search
ACM SIGACT News
A new ranking principle for multimedia information retrieval
Proceedings of the fourth ACM conference on Digital libraries
Multimedia Information Retrieval: Content-Based Information Retrieval from Large Text and Audio Databases
A Tutorial on MPEG/Audio Compression
IEEE MultiMedia
The text retrieval conferences (TRECS)
TIPSTER '98 Proceedings of a workshop on held at Baltimore, Maryland: October 13-15, 1998
NTLM: a time-enhanced language model based ranking approach for web search
WISS'10 Proceedings of the 2010 international conference on Web information systems engineering
Ranking support for keyword search on structured data using relevance models
Proceedings of the 20th ACM international conference on Information and knowledge management
Digital library retrieval model using subject classification table and user profile
ICADL'04 Proceedings of the 7th international Conference on Digital Libraries: international collaboration and cross-fertilization
Exploiting location information for Web search
Computers in Human Behavior
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A theoretic framework for multimedia information retrieval is introduced which guarantees optimal retrieval effectiveness. In particular, a Ranking Principle for Distributed Multimedia-Documents (RPDM) is described together with an algorithm that satisfies this principle. Finally, the RPDM is shown to be a generalization of the Probability Ranking principle (PRP) which guarantees optimal retrieval effectiveness in the case of text document retrieval. The PRP justifies theoretically the relevance ranking adopted by modern search engines. In contrast to the classical PRP, the new RPDM takes into account transmission and inspection time, and most importantly, aspectual recall rather than simple recall.