225 research outputs found
Event and map content personalisation in a mobile and context-aware environment.
Effective methods for information access are of the greatest importance for our modern lives “ particularly with respect to handheld devices. Personalisation is one such method which models a users characteristics to deliver content more focused to the users needs. The emerging area of sophisticated mobile computing devices has started to inspire new forms of personalised systems that include aspects of the persons contextual environment. This thesis seeks to understand the role of personalisation and context, to evaluate the effectiveness of context for content personalisation and to investigate the event and map content domain for mobile usage. The work presented in this thesis has three parts: The first part is a user experiment on context that investigated the contextual attributes of time, location and interest, with respect to participants perception of their usefulness. Results show highly dynamic and interconnected effects of context on participants usefulness ratings. In the second part, these results were applied to create a predictive model of context that was related to attribution theory and then combined with an information retrieval score to create a weighted personalisation model. In the third part of this work, the personalisation model was applied in a mobile experiment. Participants solved situational search tasks using a (i) non-personalized and a (ii) personalized mobile information system, and rating entertainment events based on usefulness. Results showed that the personalised system delivered about 20% more useful content to the mobile user than the non-personalised system, with some indication for reduced search effort in terms of time and the amount of queries per task. The work presented provides evidence for the promising potential of context to facilitate personalised information delivery to users of mobile devices. Overall, it serves as an example of an investigation into the effectiveness of context from multiple angles and provides a potential link to some of the aspects of psychology as a potential source for a deeper understanding of contextual processes in humans
Vol. 13, No. 3
Contents:
Discipline for Off-Duty Conduct: Can (And If So, When Should) Big Brother Watch?, by Steven Mark Bierig
Recent Developments, by the Student Editorial Board
Further References, compiled by Margaret A. Chaplanhttps://scholarship.kentlaw.iit.edu/iperr/1023/thumbnail.jp
Contextual information and assessor characteristics in complex question answering
The ciqa track investigates the role of interaction in answering complex questions: questions that relate two or more entities by some specified relationship. In our submission to the first ciqa track we were interested in the interplay between groups of variables: variables describing the question creators, the questions asked and the presentation of answers to the questions. We used two interaction forms - html questionnaires completed before answer assessment - to gain contextual information from the answer assessors to better understand what factors influence assessors when judging retrieved answers to complex questions. Our results indicate the importance of understanding the assessor's personal relationship to the question - their existing topical knowledge for example - and also the presentation of the answers - contextual information about the answer to aid in the assessment of the answer
Intra-assessor consistency in question answering
In this paper we investigate the consistency of answer assessment in a complex question answering task examining features of assessor consistency, types of answers and question type
On the Calibration of Multilevel Monte Carlo Ensemble Forecasts
The multilevel Monte Carlo method can efficiently compute statistical estimates of discretized random variables for a given error tolerance. Traditionally, only a certain statistic is computed from a particular implementation of multilevel Monte Carlo. This article considers the multilevel case in which one wants to verify and evaluate a single ensemble that forms an empirical approximation to many different statistics, namely an ensemble forecast. We propose a simple algorithm that, in the univariate case, allows one to derive a statistically consistent single ensemble forecast from the hierarchy of ensembles that are formed during an implementation of multilevel Monte Carlo. This ensemble forecast then allows the entire multilevel hierarchy of ensembles to be evaluated using standard ensemble forecast verification techniques. We demonstrate the case of evaluating the calibration of the forecast
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