Recommending case bases : applications in social web search
Date:
2011-09-15
Recommended citation:
Saaya, Zurina, Smyth, Barry, Coyle, Maurice, Briggs, Peter
: Recommending case bases : applications in social web search. Paper presented at the International Conference on Case Based Reasoning (ICCBR-11), Greenwich, London, UK, 12-15 September, 2011. 2011-09-15.
Abstract:
For the main part, when it comes to questions of retrieval, the focus of CBR research has been on the retrieval of cases from a repository of experience knowledge or case base. In this paper we consider a complementary retrieval issue, namely the retrieval of case bases themselves in scenarios where experience may be distributed across multiple case repositories. We motivate this problem with reference to a deployed social web search service called HeyStaks, which is based on the availability of multiple repositories of shared search knowledge, known as staks, and which is fully integrated into mainstream search engines in order to provide a more collaborative search experience. We describe the case base retrieval problem in the context of HeyStaks, propose a number of case base retrieval strategies, and evaluate them using real-user data from recent deployments.
Funding Details:
Science Foundation Ireland; Other funder
Funding Details:
HeyStaks Technologies Ltd.; Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia; Universiti Teknikal Malaysia Melaka
Conference Details:
Paper presented at the International Conference on Case Based Reasoning (ICCBR-11), Greenwich, London, UK, 12-15 September, 2011
Type of material:
Conference Publication
Publisher:
Springer
Copyright (published version):
2011 Springer
Rights statement:
The final publication is available at springerlink.com
Is part of:
Ram, A. and Wiratunga, N. (eds.).19th International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning, ICCBR 2011, London, UK, September 12-15, 2011, Proceedings
Status of item:
Peer reviewed
Language:
en
Availability:
Full text available
Available:
2012-02-02T16:14:35Z
Show full item record
Files in this item
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
This item is available under the Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland. No item may be reproduced for commercial purposes. For other possible restrictions on use please refer to the publisher's URL where this is made available, or to notes contained in the item itself. Other terms may apply.
If you are a publisher or author and have copyright concerns for any item, please email research.repository@ucd.ie and the item will be withdrawn immediately. The author or person responsible for depositing the article will be contacted within one business day.