KMi Seminars
Some challenges for large-scale data management
This event took place on Wednesday 13 March 2013 at 11:30

Dr. Jose Manuel Gomez-Perez Intelligent Software Components (iSOCO)


The digital universe is booming, especially in terms of the amount of

metadata and user-generated data available. This raises serious data

management challenges, including the identification, amongst all such

data, of the particular data pieces relevant to a specific purpose and

the observation of the lifecycle of those data entities. Finer grain

challenges include evolution and versioning and the impact that change

and non availability of resources may have on depending applications,

causing decay and eventually malfunction. In this talk, we focus on

these challenges with special emphasis on the preservation and reuse

of scientific workflows in data-intensive research. We introduce the

concept of workflow-centric Research Object (RO) as the means to

identify and structure the relevant resources for the execution of

workflows and to ensure the replicability of their results, addressing

data as first-class citizens. We also analyze the main reasons for

workflow (and therefore RO) decay in this particular domain and

propose methods and tools for its prevention. Finally, we reflect on

the lessons learnt and the potential use of these concepts in other

data-intensive domains.



 
KMi Seminars Event | SSSW 2013, The 10th Summer School on Ontology Engineering and the Semantic Web Journal | 25 years of knowledge acquisition
 

Multimedia and Information Systems is...


Multimedia and Information Systems
Our research is centred around the theme of Multimedia Information Retrieval, ie, Video Search Engines, Image Databases, Spoken Document Retrieval, Music Retrieval, Query Languages and Query Mediation.

We focus on content-based information retrieval over a wide range of data spanning form unstructured text and unlabelled images over spoken documents and music to videos. This encompasses the modelling of human perception of relevance and similarity, the learning from user actions and the up-to-date presentation of information. Currently we are building a research version of an integrated multimedia information retrieval system MIR to be used as a research prototype. We aim for a system that understands the user's information need and successfully links it to the appropriate information sources, be it a report or a TV news clip. This work is guided by the vision that an automated knowledge extraction system ultimately empowers people making efficient use of information sources without the burden of filing data into specialised databases.

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