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Information for Research in Developing Countries - Information Technology, a Friend or Foe?Arunachalam, Subbiah January 2003 (has links)
The difference between the advanced and developing countries in the matter of access to information for research has been continually increasing. The advent of the Internet and electronic sources of information has not only exacerbated the gap but also led to the exclusion of developing country researchers from taking part as equal partners in publishing, refereeing, and in international collaboration. If handled imaginatively, the very same technologies can help bridge the information gap between the rich and the poor countries and help improve research productivity worldwide. Many initiatives that are already in place are described and suggestions are given on steps to be taken by developing country researchers.
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Indicators of Accuracy of Consumer Health Information on the InternetFallis, Don, Fricke, Martin January 2002 (has links)
Objectives: To identify indicators of accuracy for consumer health information on the Internet. The results will help lay people distinguish accurate from inaccurate health information on the Internet.
Design: Several popular search engines (Yahoo, AltaVista, and Google) were used to find Web pages on the treatment of
fever in children. The accuracy and completeness of these Web pages was determined by comparing their content with that of an instrument developed from authoritative sources on treating fever in children. The presence on these Web pages of a number of proposed indicators of accuracy, taken from published guidelines for evaluating the quality of health information on the Internet, was noted.
Main Outcome Measures: Correlation between the accuracy of Web pages on treating fever in children and the presence of proposed indicators of accuracy on these pages. Likelihood ratios for the presence (and absence) of these proposed indicators.
Results: One hundred Web pages were identified and characterized as "more accurate" or "less accurate." Three indicators correlated with accuracy: displaying the HONcode logo, having an organization domain, and displaying a copyright. Many proposed indicators taken from published guidelines did not correlate with accuracy (e.g., the author being identified and the author having medical credentials) or inaccuracy (e.g., lack of currency and advertising).
Conclusions: This method provides a systematic way of identifying indicators that are correlated with the accuracy (or inaccuracy) of health information on the Internet. Three such indicators have been identified in this study. Identifying such indicators and informing the providers and consumers of health information about them would be valuable for public health care.
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DGPort: A Web Portal for Digital GovernmentYin, C.Q., Nickels, L.D., Chen, C.Z., Ng, Gavin, Chen, Hsinchun January 2003 (has links)
Artificial Intelligence Lab, Department of MIS, University of Arizona / This paper provides a summary of the initial development of a Web portal for the digital government
domain. Information retrieval techniques commonly used to find information on the Internet are
discussed along with the problems associated with these techniques that led to the development of the
Digital Government Web portal (DGPort). We also discuss the advantages that DGPort could have for
researchers in the digital government domain as well as the value-added features that this portal provides.
Future evaluation plans for the portal are also described.
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Building an Infrastructure for Law Enforcement Information Sharing and Collaboration: Design Issues and ChallengesChau, Michael, Atabakhsh, Homa, Zeng, Daniel, Chen, Hsinchun January 2001 (has links)
Artificial Intelligence Lab, Department of MIS, University of Arizona / With the exponential growth of the Internet, information can be shared among government agencies more easily than before. However, this also poses some design issues and challenges. This article reports on our experience in building an infrastructure for information sharing and collaboration in the law enforcement domain. Based on our user requirement studies with the Tucson Police Department, three main design challenges are identified and discussed in details. Based on our findings, we propose an infrastructure to address these issues. The proposed design consists of three modules, namely (1) Security and Confidentiality Management Module, (2) Information Access and Monitoring Module, and (3)
Collaboration Module. A prototype system will be deployed and tested at the Tucson Police Department. We anticipate that our studies can potentially provide useful insight to other digital government research projects.
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Federating diverse collections of scientific literatureSchatz, Bruce R., Mischo, William, Cole, Timothy, Hardin, J., Bishop, Ann Peterson, Chen, Hsinchun 05 1900 (has links)
Artificial Intelligence Lab, Department of MIS, University of Arizona / A University of Illinios project is developing an infrastructure for indexing scientific literature so that mutliple Internet sources can be searched as a single federated digital library.
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Tagging for health information organisation and retrievalKipp, Margaret E. I. January 2007 (has links)
This paper examines the tagging practices evident on CiteULike, a research oriented social bookmarking site for journal articles. Articles selected for this study were health information and medicine related. Tagging practices were examined using standard informetric measures for analysis of bibliographic information and analysis of term use. Additionally, tags were compared to descriptors assigned to the same article.
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Toward an Epistemology of WikipediaFallis, Don January 2008 (has links)
Wikipedia (the â free online encyclopedia that anyone can editâ ) is having a huge impact on how a great many people gather information about the world. So, it is important for epistemologists and information scientists to ask whether or not people are likely to acquire knowledge as a result of having access to this information source. In other words, is Wikipedia having good epistemic consequences? After surveying the various concerns that have been raised about the reliability of Wikipedia, this paper argues that the epistemic consequences of people using Wikipedia as a source of information are likely to be quite good. According to several empirical studies, the reliability of Wikipedia compares favorably to the reliability of traditional encyclopedias. Furthermore, the reliability of Wikipedia compares even more favorably to the reliability of those information sources that people would be likely to use if Wikipedia did not exist (viz., websites that are as freely and easily accessible as Wikipedia). In addition, Wikipedia has a number of other epistemic virtues (e.g., power, speed, and fecundity) that arguably outweigh any deficiency in terms of reliability. Even so, epistemologists and information scientists should certainly be trying to identify changes (or alternatives) to Wikipedia that will bring about even better epistemic consequences. This paper suggests that, in order to improve Wikipedia, we need to clarify what our epistemic values are and we need a better understanding of why Wikipedia works as well as it does.
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Design and evaluation of a multi-agent collaborative Web mining systemChau, Michael, Zeng, Daniel, Chen, Hsinchun, Huang, Michael, Hendriawan, David 04 1900 (has links)
Artificial Intelligence Lab, Department of MIS, University of Arizona / Most existing Web search tools work only with individual users and do not help a user benefit from previous search
experiences of others. In this paper, we present the Collaborative Spider, a multi-agent system designed to provide post-retrieval
analysis and enable across-user collaboration in Web search and mining. This system allows the user to annotate search sessions
and share them with other users. We also report a user study designed to evaluate the effectiveness of this system. Our
experimental findings show that subjectsâ search performance was degraded, compared to individual search scenarios in which
users had no access to previous searches, when they had access to a limited number (e.g., 1 or 2) of earlier search sessions done
by other users. However, search performance improved significantly when subjects had access to more search sessions. This
indicates that gain from collaboration through collaborative Web searching and analysis does not outweigh the overhead of
browsing and comprehending other usersâ past searches until a certain number of shared sessions have been reached. In this
paper, we also catalog and analyze several different types of user collaboration behavior observed in the context of Web mining.
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E-Mail Interviewing in Qualitative Research: A Methodological DiscussionMeho, Lokman I. 08 1900 (has links)
This article summarizes findings from studies that employed electronic mail (e-mail) for conducting indepth interviewing. It discusses the benefits of, and the challenges associated with, using e-mail interviewing in qualitative research. The article concludes that while a mixed mode interviewing strategy should be considered when possible, e-mail interviewing can be in many cases a viable alternative to face-to-face and telephone interviewing. A list of recommendations for carrying out effective e-mail interviews is presented.
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Google Scholar and 100% Availability of Information. Information Technology and Libraries, 25(1), 52-56Pomerantz, Jeffrey 06 1900 (has links)
This paper discusses Google Scholar as an extension of
Kilgourâ s goal to improve the availability of information.
Kilgour was instrumental in the early development of the
online library catalog, and he proposed passage retrieval
to aid in information seeking. Google Scholar is a direct
descendent of these technologies foreseen by Kilgour.
Google Scholar holds promise as a means for libraries
to expand their reach to new user communities, and to
enable libraries to provide quality resources to users during
their online search process.
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