Learning to link with wikipedia
Proceedings of the 17th ACM conference on Information and knowledge management
Crowdsourcing for relevance evaluation
ACM SIGIR Forum
Who are the crowdworkers?: shifting demographics in mechanical turk
CHI '10 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
An exploration into activity-informed physical advertising using PEST
PERVASIVE'07 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Pervasive computing
ICWE'10 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Current trends in web engineering
An evaluation framework for plagiarism detection
COLING '10 Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Computational Linguistics: Posters
Human-assisted graph search: it's okay to ask questions
Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment
Topical clustering of search results
Proceedings of the fifth ACM international conference on Web search and data mining
Paraphrase acquisition via crowdsourcing and machine learning
ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology (TIST) - Special Sections on Paraphrasing; Intelligent Systems for Socially Aware Computing; Social Computing, Behavioral-Cultural Modeling, and Prediction
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In the 50 years since John McCarthy coined the term artificial intelligence, much progress has been made toward identifying, understanding, and automating many classes of symbolic and computational problems that were once the exclusive domain of human intelligence. Much work remains in the field because humans still significantly outperform the most powerful computers at completing such simple tasks as identifying objects in photographs—something children can do even before they learn to speak.