GIPSY: automated geographic indexing of text documents
Journal of the American Society for Information Science - Special issue: spatial information
Toward active, extensible, networked documents: multivalent architecture and applications
Proceedings of the first ACM international conference on Digital libraries
Document Image Decoding Using Markov Source Models
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
A protocol and server for a distributed digital technical report library
A protocol and server for a distributed digital technical report library
Context and Structure in Automated Full-Text Information Access
Context and Structure in Automated Full-Text Information Access
Topic Characterization of Full Length Texts
Topic Characterization of Full Length Texts
Toward active, extensible, networked documents: multivalent architecture and applications
Proceedings of the first ACM international conference on Digital libraries
SAIRE—a scalable agent-based information retrieval engine
AGENTS '97 Proceedings of the first international conference on Autonomous agents
Proceedings of the third ACM conference on Digital libraries
Digital Libraries for the Next Millennium: Challenges and Research Directions
Information Systems Frontiers
Constructing Geographic Digital Libraries using a Hypermedia Framework
Multimedia Tools and Applications
Looking Both Ways: SSD 1999 ±10
SSD '99 Proceedings of the 6th International Symposium on Advances in Spatial Databases
A Study of Musical Features for Melody Databases
DEXA '99 Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Database and Expert Systems Applications
Data management in environmental information systems
Handbook of massive data sets
Hi-index | 4.10 |
Work-centered digital information services are a set of library-like services meant to address work group needs. Workplace users especially need to access legacy documents and external collections. They also frequently want to retrieve information (rather than documents per se), and they require that digital information systems be integrated into established work practices. Realizing work-centered digital information systems requires a broad technical agenda. Three types of analysis-document image, natural-language, and computer vision-are necessary to facilitate information extraction. Users also need new user interface paradigms and authoring tools to better access multimedia information, as well as improved protocols for client-program interaction with repositories (collections). Moreover, entirely new types of documents must be developed to exploit these capabilities. The system developed by the authors follows a client-server architecture, in which the servers are repositories implemented as databases supporting user-defined functions and user-defined access methods. The repositories also serve as indexing servers. Various protocols are stipulated for these repositories to communicate with clients. A number of interoperating clients serve as browsers for and facilitate access to different document data types. The authors are creating a prototype set of information services called the California Environmental Digital Information System, which includes a diverse collection of environmental data. The authors want this testbed to become a national resource.