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Date
2003-12Type
- Journal Article
ETH Bibliography
no
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Abstract
As the number of Internet users and the number of accessible Web pages grows, it is becoming increasingly difficult for users to find documents that are relevant to their particular needs. Users must either browse through a large hierarchy of concepts to find the information for which they are looking or submit a query to a publicly available search engine and wade through hundreds of results, most of them irrelevant. The core of the problem is that whether the user is browsing or searching, whether they are an eighth grade student or a Nobel prize winner, the identical information is selected and it is presented the same way. In this paper, we report on research that adapts information navigation based on a user profile structured as a weighted concept hierarchy. A user may create his or her own concept hierarchy and use them for browsing Web sites. Or, the user profile may be created from a reference ontology by 'watching over the user's shoulder' while they browse. We show that these automatically created profiles reflect the user's interests quite well and they are able to produce moderate improvements when applied to search results. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Web Intelligence and Agent SystemsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
IOS PressSubject
browsing; ontologies; conceptual search; web navigation; personalizationOrganisational unit
03634 - Basin, David / Basin, David
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ETH Bibliography
no
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