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Jeffrey Xu Yu

    Advanced web technologies and applications
    Advances in web age information management
    Web communities
    • 2010

      Web communities

      Analysis and Construction

      • 187pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,5(2)Évaluer

      Due to the lack of a uniform schema for Web documents and the sheer amount and dynamics of Web data, both the effectiveness and the efficiency of information management and retrieval of Web data is often unsatisfactory when using conventional data management techniques. Web community, defined as a set of Web-based documents with its own logical structure, is a flexible and efficient approach to support information retrieval and to implement various applications. Zhang and his co-authors explain how to construct and analyse Web communities based on information like Web document contents, hyperlinks, or user access logs. Their approaches combine results from Web search algorithms, Web clustering methods, and Web usage mining. They also detail the necessary preliminaries needed to understand the algorithms presented, and they discuss several successful existing applications. Researchers and students in information retrieval and Web search find in this all the necessary basics and methods to create and understand Web communities. Professionals developing Web applications will additionally benefit from the samples presented for their own designs and implementations.

      Web communities
    • 2006

      Constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Web-Age Information Management, WAIM 2006, held in Hong Kong, June 2006. This book presents papers that are organized in topical sections on indexing, XML query processing, information retrieval, sensor networks and grid computing, peer-to-peer systems, and more.

      Advances in web age information management
    • 2004

      Advanced web technologies and applications

      • 915pages
      • 33 heures de lecture

      The Asia-Pacific region has rapidly become a leader in Web technologies and has significantly contributed to WWW research and development. Since the inaugural Asia-Pacific Web conference in 1998, APWeb has served as a vital platform for researchers, professionals, and industry practitioners to exchange knowledge and report advancements in WWW technologies and applications. In 2004, APWeb received an impressive 386 full-paper submissions, comprising 375 research papers and 11 industrial papers from 20 countries, including Australia, Canada, China, and the USA. Each submission underwent a rigorous review process by three program committee members. Ultimately, 60 regular papers, 24 short papers, 15 poster papers, and 3 industrial papers were selected for inclusion in the proceedings. The chosen papers addressed a diverse array of topics such as Web services, Web intelligence, personalization, query processing, mining, XML databases, workflow management, E-commerce, data warehousing, P2P systems, Grid computing, and networking. Notably, the paper “Towards Adaptive Probabilistic Search in Unstructured P2P Systems,” co-authored by Linhao Xu and others, was honored as the best student paper at APWeb 2004.

      Advanced web technologies and applications