This session by Terence Huwe
What is meaning-based computing? (MBC)
Importance of forecasting probability – ‘how should we modify our beliefs in the light of new information” – see “The Theory that would not Die” Sharon Bertsch McGrayne (http://www.librarything.com/work/11186931)
Based on Bayesian analysis.
What are the applications and potential uses of meaning based computing? Used for code breaking, handwriting and speech analysis etc. Approach commercialised by Michael Lynch – in the form of Autonomy (now acquired by Hewlett-Packard) – applied to ‘enterprise search’. 80% of a firm’s info assets are unstructured and thus hard to retrieve conventionally.
Two events furthered the growth of MBC – in 2007 the US federal rules of civil procedure made all data forms admissible for litigation – seen in the Enron case. The explosion in social media has created new challenges for firms – meaning they need to track huge amounts of unstructured information.
So – enterprise search is booming – MBC thrives in commercial and pure research settings. Autonomy’s MBC-based tools:
- Implistic Query – hotkey to related information without leaving a primary task
- Hyperlinking – live links, diverse sources
- Smart or Active Folders
- Automatic Taxonomy Generation
- Sentiment Analysis
- Automatic clustering of all data types
- “meaning based healthcare”
- Universities use it at the enterprise level
- Consulting
- Telecommunications
- Academic-based digital library developers may take an interest
- Vendors might explore MBC as a meta-search tool
- Repositories may get a boost
- The practice of reference librarianship would benefit from this kind of tool
- Need to be aware of MCB
- Should analyse it’s, as yet unknown, potential for search and discovery within our digital libraries