29 research outputs found

    Attributing and Referencing (Research) Software: Best Practices and Outlook from Inria

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    Software is a fundamental pillar of modern scientiic research, not only in computer science, but actually across all elds and disciplines. However, there is a lack of adequate means to cite and reference software, for many reasons. An obvious rst reason is software authorship, which can range from a single developer to a whole team, and can even vary in time. The panorama is even more complex than that, because many roles can be involved in software development: software architect, coder, debugger, tester, team manager, and so on. Arguably, the researchers who have invented the key algorithms underlying the software can also claim a part of the authorship. And there are many other reasons that make this issue complex. We provide in this paper a contribution to the ongoing eeorts to develop proper guidelines and recommendations for software citation, building upon the internal experience of Inria, the French research institute for digital sciences. As a central contribution, we make three key recommendations. (1) We propose a richer taxonomy for software contributions with a qualitative scale. (2) We claim that it is essential to put the human at the heart of the evaluation. And (3) we propose to distinguish citation from reference

    SocialSensor: sensing user generated input for improved media discovery and experience

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    SocialSensor will develop a new framework for enabling real-time multimedia indexing and search in the Social Web. The project moves beyond conventional text-based indexing and retrieval models by mining and aggregating user inputs and content over multiple social networking sites. Social Indexing will incorporate information about the structure and activity of the users‟ social network directly into the multimedia analysis and search process. Furthermore, it will enhance the multimedia consumption experience by developing novel user-centric media visualization and browsing paradigms. For example, SocialSensor will analyse the dynamic and massive user contributions in order to extract unbiased trending topics and events and will use social connections for improved recommendations. To achieve its objectives, SocialSensor introduces the concept of Dynamic Social COntainers (DySCOs), a new layer of online multimedia content organisation with particular emphasis on the real-time, social and contextual nature of content and information consumption. Through the proposed DySCOs-centered media search, SocialSensor will integrate social content mining, search and intelligent presentation in a personalized, context and network-aware way, based on aggregation and indexing of both UGC and multimedia Web content

    Schema Extraction for Semi-Structured Data

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    The emerging field of semistructured data leads to new ways of representing data as 'schemaless' or 'self-describing'. However, in many applications data has often some regularity and ignoring the (possibly partial) structure hinders the abilities to interpret the data and to access them efficiently. In this paper we investigate a knowledge-based approach for discovering (partial) implicit structures from semistructured data. We show that semistructured data, represented in the form of labeled directed graphs can be typed using description logics

    A generic model for video content based retrieval

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    A generic model for video content based retrieval

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    A rule based data manipulation language for OLAP systems

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    A rule based data manipulation language for OLAP systems

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