|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
The aim of this book is to stimulate research on the topic of the
Social Internet of Things, and explore how Internet of Things
architectures, tools, and services can be conceptualized and
developed so as to reveal, amplify and inspire the capacities of
people, including the socialization or collaborations that happen
through or around smart objects and smart environments. From new
ways of negotiating privacy, to the consequences of increased
automation, the Internet of Things poses new challenges and opens
up new questions that often go beyond the technology itself, and
rather focus on how the technology will become embedded in our
future communities, families, practices, and environment, and how
these will change in turn.
This volume contains revised and extended versions of papers
presented at the 4th edition of the international workshop on
Distributed and Agent-based Retrieval Tools (DART'10) held in June
2010, in conjunction with the Symposium on Human Language
Technology for the Information Society, in Geneva, Switzerland.
Practitioners and researchers working on pervasive and intelligent
access to web services and distributed information retrieval met to
share their results and insights in intriguing and challenging
topics such as: (i) social media and collaboration, (ii) new
challenges in search technology, (iii) sentiment analysis and
opinion mining, (iv) distributed information retrieval, (v)
pervasive intelligence. Every chapter, before discussing in depth
the specific topic, presents a comprehensive review of related work
and state of the art, in the hope of this volume to be of use in
the years to come, to both researchers and students.
At DART'09, held in conjunction with the 2009 IEEE/WIC/ACM
International Conference on Web Intelligence (WI 2009) and
Intelligent Agent Technology (IAT 2009) in Milan (Italy),
practitioners and researchers working on pervasive and intelligent
access to web services and distributed information retrieval met to
compare their work ad insights in such fascinating topics. Extended
and revised versions of their papers, together with selected and
invited original contributions, are collected in this book. Topics
covered are those that emerged at DART'09 as the most intriguing
and challenging: (i) community oriented tools and techniques as
infrastructure of the Web 2.0; (ii) agent technology applied to
virtual world scenarios; (iii) context aware information retrieval;
(iv) content based information retrieval; and (v) industrial
applications of information retrieval. Every chapter, before
discussing in depth the specific topic, presents a comprehensive
review of related work and state of the art, in the hope of this
volume to be of use in the years to come, to both researchers and
students.
This volume contains revised and extended versions of papers
presented at the 4th edition of the international workshop on
Distributed and Agent-based Retrieval Tools (DART'10) held in June
2010, in conjunction with the Symposium on Human Language
Technology for the Information Society, in Geneva, Switzerland.
Practitioners and researchers working on pervasive and intelligent
access to web services and distributed information retrieval met to
share their results and insights in intriguing and challenging
topics such as: (i) social media and collaboration, (ii) new
challenges in search technology, (iii) sentiment analysis and
opinion mining, (iv) distributed information retrieval, (v)
pervasive intelligence. Every chapter, before discussing in depth
the specific topic, presents a comprehensive review of related work
and state of the art, in the hope of this volume to be of use in
the years to come, to both researchers and students.
At DART'09, held in conjunction with the 2009 IEEE/WIC/ACM
International Conference on Web Intelligence (WI 2009) and
Intelligent Agent Technology (IAT 2009) in Milan (Italy),
practitioners and researchers working on pervasive and intelligent
access to web services and distributed information retrieval met to
compare their work ad insights in such fascinating topics. Extended
and revised versions of their papers, together with selected and
invited original contributions, are collected in this book. Topics
covered are those that emerged at DART'09 as the most intriguing
and challenging: (i) community oriented tools and techniques as
infrastructure of the Web 2.0; (ii) agent technology applied to
virtual world scenarios; (iii) context aware information retrieval;
(iv) content based information retrieval; and (v) industrial
applications of information retrieval. Every chapter, before
discussing in depth the specific topic, presents a comprehensive
review of related work and state of the art, in the hope of this
volume to be of use in the years to come, to both researchers and
students.
The aim of this book is to stimulate research on the topic of the
Social Internet of Things, and explore how Internet of Things
architectures, tools, and services can be conceptualized and
developed so as to reveal, amplify and inspire the capacities of
people, including the socialization or collaborations that happen
through or around smart objects and smart environments. From new
ways of negotiating privacy, to the consequences of increased
automation, the Internet of Things poses new challenges and opens
up new questions that often go beyond the technology itself, and
rather focus on how the technology will become embedded in our
future communities, families, practices, and environment, and how
these will change in turn.
|
|