106 research outputs found
Contextualization of topics - browsing through terms, authors, journals and cluster allocations
This paper builds on an innovative Information Retrieval tool, Ariadne. The
tool has been developed as an interactive network visualization and browsing
tool for large-scale bibliographic databases. It basically allows to gain
insights into a topic by contextualizing a search query (Koopman et al., 2015).
In this paper, we apply the Ariadne tool to a far smaller dataset of 111,616
documents in astronomy and astrophysics. Labeled as the Berlin dataset, this
data have been used by several research teams to apply and later compare
different clustering algorithms. The quest for this team effort is how to
delineate topics. This paper contributes to this challenge in two different
ways. First, we produce one of the different cluster solution and second, we
use Ariadne (the method behind it, and the interface - called LittleAriadne) to
display cluster solutions of the different group members. By providing a tool
that allows the visual inspection of the similarity of article clusters
produced by different algorithms, we present a complementary approach to other
possible means of comparison. More particular, we discuss how we can - with
LittleAriadne - browse through the network of topical terms, authors, journals
and cluster solutions in the Berlin dataset and compare cluster solutions as
well as see their context.Comment: proceedings of the ISSI 2015 conference (accepted
Ariadne's Thread - Interactive Navigation in a World of Networked Information
This work-in-progress paper introduces an interface for the interactive
visual exploration of the context of queries using the ArticleFirst database, a
product of OCLC. We describe a workflow which allows the user to browse live
entities associated with 65 million articles. In the on-line interface, each
query leads to a specific network representation of the most prevailing
entities: topics (words), authors, journals and Dewey decimal classes linked to
the set of terms in the query. This network represents the context of a query.
Each of the network nodes is clickable: by clicking through, a user traverses a
large space of articles along dimensions of authors, journals, Dewey classes
and words simultaneously. We present different use cases of such an interface.
This paper provides a link between the quest for maps of science and on-going
debates in HCI about the use of interactive information visualisation to
empower users in their search.Comment: CHI'15 Extended Abstracts, April 18-23, 2015, Seoul, Republic of
Korea. ACM 978-1-4503-3146-3/15/0
Mite and pet allergen levels in homes of children born to allergic and nonallergic parents: the PIAMA study.
The Prevention and Incidence of Asthma and Mite Allergy (PIAMA) study is a birth cohort study that investigates the influence of allergen exposure on the development of allergy and asthma in the first several years of life. The objectives of this study were to investigate the relationship between a family history of allergy and/or asthma and exposure of newborn children to mite and pet allergen and to study the influence of different home and occupant characteristics on mite allergen exposure. Dust was sampled from the child's mattress and the parental mattress at 3 months after birth of the index child and analyzed for mite and pet allergens. Subjects were divided in groups according to history of asthma and allergy in their parents, and allergen exposure was studied in the different groups. Cat allergen exposure was significantly lower on parental mattresses in families with allergic mothers, but dog allergen exposure was not different. Mite allergen exposure was lower on parental mattresses in families with allergic mothers. Use of mite allergen-impermeable mattress covers reduced mite allergen exposure. Some other characteristics such as age of home and mattress were also found to influence mite allergen exposure. Parental mattresses in homes of allergic mothers had lower cat and mite (but not dog) allergen loadings than mattresses in homes of nonallergic parents. Paternal (as opposed to maternal) allergy seemed to have little influence
Early respiratory and skin symptoms in relation to ethnic background: the importance of socioeconomic status; the PIAMA study
AIMS: To evaluate ethnic differences in the prevalence of respiratory and
skin symptoms in the first two years of life. METHODS: A total of 4146
children participated in the Prevention and Incidence of Asthma and Mite
Allergy (PIAMA) study. Parents completed questionnaires on respirato
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