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Issue title: Papers from the 29th NFAIS Annual Conference
Guest editors: A.W. Elias, A.E. Cawkell and T. Matsumura
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Mauldin, Michael | Carbonell, Jaime | Thomason, Richmond
Affiliations: Computer Science Department, Carnegie – Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA
Note: [*] Paper presented at the 29th Annual Conference of the National Federation of Abstracting and Information Services (NFAIS), Arlington, Virginia – Pre-Conference Seminar, 1 March 1987.
Abstract: Most present-day information retrieval systems use the presence or absence of keywords to determine whether a document is relevant to a user's query. Although some systems do sophisticated statistical weighting and word-stem extraction, or exploit a hierarchical controlled vocabulary, all suffer from the same basic limitation: their inability to represent relational information among primitive concepts. Research in artificial intelligence and natural-language processing has produced richer representations of texts, and techniques for reasoning about these representations. At the heart of these developments is the use of frames to provide a relational semantic representation of documents and user queries. This paper describes these frame-based knowledge representation methods as they apply to information retrieval, including research in user interfaces and automatic document classification, most notably the FERRET project at CMU, which classifies texts using a text skimming parser.
DOI: 10.3233/ISU-1987-74-503
Journal: Information Services & Use, vol. 7, no. 4-5, pp. 103-117, 1987
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