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Tetsuya Sakai's blog on information retrieval research 酒井哲也の情報検索研究ブログ I confess to the world: I overslept and missed the Senior PC meeting. Woke up at 8:15 and made the 8:30 session (evaluation and measurement I) which I chaired. From Ben's talk: So this is what Kendall looked like! From Gabriella's talk From Falk's talk SIGIR2010 - Geneva. SIGIR2011 - Beijing. SIGIR2012 - Portland, Oregon. A litt
SIGIR ’09 is in full swing! I arrived on Sunday evening, and the reception was like Cheers (“where everyone knows your name“)–only that, at least in my case, I was meeting many people face-to-face for the first time in years, and in some cases for the first time, period! I reconnected with some of the SIGIR regulars whom I’d missed last year (Singapore was a bit far for me), finally met my editor,
SIGIR is the major international forum for the presentation of new research results and the demonstration of new systems and techniques in the broad field of information retrieval. Yahoo! has 7 papers accepted at this year's conference including the Best Paper Award for "Sources of Evidence for Vertical Selection" by Jaime Arguello (Carnegie Mellon University and Yahoo! intern), Fernando Diaz (Yah
Tetsuya Sakai's blog on information retrieval research 酒井哲也の情報検索研究ブログ Attended the IRJ editorial board lunch meeting. Presented a poster at the reception in the evening. Sue Dumais is the second MSR researcher to receive the Salton Award. (The first is Steve Robertson.) She's saying that, while documents have kept growing in size and diversity, the query input interface has not changed. Basically
By Rob Knies, Managing Editor, Microsoft Research Organizing threaded discussions. Using reasoning to rank answers on community sites. Predicting click-through rates for news queries. Assessing how crawl policies affect the effectiveness of Web search. Taking context into consideration when classifying queries and predicting user interests. Much remains to be solved in the field of information ret
Tetsuya Sakai's blog on information retrieval research 酒井哲也の情報検索研究ブログ I've joined the committee for selecting the best (student) paper for SIGIR 2009. We have eleven candidate papers. I did this last year too. The full paper acceptance rate for this year is 16%, the toughest ever. Even though the target acceptance rate these days is 20%, reviewers expect a lot from a SIGIR submission.
Thanks to Jeff Dalton for alerting me to SIGIR 2009 announcing the lists of accepted papers and posters. As Jon Elsas points out, the authorship looks quite different this year than from previous years, with industry showing an especially strong presence: 38% of the papers have at least one author from Microsoft (21 papers), Yahoo! (7 papers), or Google (3 papers) No papers from current UMass rese
Tetsuya Sakai's blog on information retrieval research 酒井哲也の情報検索研究ブログ I submitted two posters to SIGIR 2009. One of them got rejected, but the other one got in: Title: Serendipitous Search via Wikipedia: A Query Log Analysis Authors: Tetsuya Sakai, Kenichi Nogami Both were about KotobaNoUchu. The SIGIR poster is becoming more and more competitive. Last year, the acceptance rate was 91/173=53%; Thi
SIGIR 2009 Workshop on The Future of IR Evaluation 23 July 2009 INTRODUCTION Evaluation is at the core of information retrieval: virtually all progress owes directly or indirectly to test collections built within the so-called Cranfield paradigm. However, in recent years, IR researchers are routinely pursuing tasks outside the traditional paradigm, by taking a broader view on tasks, users, and con
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