[comp.theory.info-retrieval] IRList Digest V3 #38

FOX@VTCS1.BITNET ("Edward A. Fox") (11/03/87)

IRList Digest           Monday, 2 November 1987      Volume 3 : Issue 38

Today's Topics:
   Announcement - Dissertation abstracts relating to inf. retrieval

News addresses are
   Internet or CSNET: fox@vtcs1.cs.vt.edu
   BITNET: fox@vtcs1.bitnet

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Date: Mon, 19 Oct 87 10:21:08 EDT
From: "Susanne M. HUMPHREY" <humphrey@MCS.NLM.NIH.GOV>
Subject: Re:  new edition of abstracts for IRList and SIGIR Forum

 . . .

Selected IR-Related Dissertation Abstracts

Compiled by:

Susanne M. Humphrey, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD 20894


The following are citations selected by title and abstract as being
related to Information Retrieval (IR), resulting from a computer
search, using the BRS Information Technologies retrieval service, of
the Dissertation Abstracts International (DAI) database produced
by University Microfilms International.

Included are the UM order number and year-month of entry into the
database; author; university, degree, and, if available, number of
pages; title; DAI subject category chosen by the author of the
dissertation; and abstract.  References are sorted first by DAI
subject category and second by author.  Citations denoted by an
MAI reference do not yet have abstracts in the database and refer
to abstracts in the published Masters Abstracts International.

Unless otherwise specified, paper or microform copies of
dissertations may be ordered from University Microfilms
International, Dissertation Copies, Post Office Box 1764, Ann Arbor,
MI 48106; telephone for U.S. (except Michigan, Hawaii, Alaska):
1-800-521-3042, for Canada: 1-800-268-6090.  Price lists and other
ordering and shipping information are in the introduction to the
published DAI.  An alternate source for copies is sometimes
provided at the end of the abstract.

The dissertation titles and abstracts contained here are published
with permission of University Microfilms International, publishers
of Dissertation Abstracts International (copyright by University
Microfilms International), and may not be reproduced without their
prior permission.

AN University Microfilms Order Number ADG87-13877.
AU ACKLEY, DAVID HOWARD.
IN Carnegie-Mellon University Ph.D. 1987, 238 pages.
TI Stochastic iterated genetic hillclimbing.
DE Computer Science.
AB     In the "black box function optimization" problem, a search
   strategy is required to find an extremal point of a function without
   knowing the structure of the function or the range of possible
   function values.  Solving such problems efficiently requires two
   abilities.  On the one hand, a strategy must be capable of learning
   while searching: It must gather global information about the space
   and concentrate the search in the most promising regions.  On the
   other hand, a strategy must be capable of sustained exploration: If
   a search of the most promising region does not uncover a
   satisfactory point, the strategy must redirect its efforts into
   other regions of the space.
       This dissertation describes a connectionist learning machine
   that produces a search strategy called stochastic iterated genetic
   hillclimbing (SIGH).  Viewed over a short period of time, SIGH
   displays a coarse-to-fine searching strategy, like simulated
   annealing and genetic algorithms.  However, in SIGH the convergence
   process is reversible.  The connectionist implementation makes it
   possible to diverge the search after it has converged, and to
   recover coarse-grained information about the space that was
   suppressed during convergence.  The successful optimization of a
   complex function by SIGH usually involves a series of such
   converge/diverge cycles.
       SIGH can be viewed as a generalization of a genetic algorithm
   and a stochastic hillclimbing algorithm, in which genetic search
   discovers starting points for subsequent hillclimbing, and
   hillclimbing biases the population for subsequent genetic search.
   Several search stratgies--including SIGH, hillclimbers, genetic
   algorithms, and simulated annealing--are tested on a set of
   illustrative functions and on a series of graph partitioning
   problems.  SIGH is competitive with genetic algorithms and simulated
   annealing in most cases, and markedly superior in a function where
   the uphill directions usually lead away from the global maximum.  In
   that case, SIGH's ability to pass information from one
   coarse-to-fine search to the next is crucial.  Combinations of
   genetic and hillclimbing techniques can offer dramatic performance
   improvements over either technique alone.

AN University Microfilms Order Number ADG87-16349.
AU CHANG, HSI ALEX.
IN The University of Arizona Ph.D. 1987, 407 pages.
TI An architecture for electronic messaging in organizations: a
   distributed problem-solving perspective.
DE Information Science.
AB     This dissertation provides a foundation for electronic
   information management in organizations.  It focuses on the
   relationships among communication, control, and information flows of
   the organization.  The main thesis addresses the question of how
   electronic mail messages may be managed according to their contents,
   ensuring at the same time, the preservation of organizational and
   social relationships.
       A taxonomy for the management of unstructured electronic
   information relevance based on the treatment of information is
   derived from current research.  Among the three paradigms, the
   information processing, the information distribution, and the
   information sharing paradigms, the inadequacy of the first two is
   recognized, and the treatment of information in its active mode is
   proposed.  This taxonomy can be used to quickly differentiate one
   research from another and evaluate its adequacy.
       Three concepts, four cornerstones, and an architecture
   constitute our framework of information relevance management.  The
   cornerstones are knowledge of the organization, knowledge of the
   individual, information construction, and information interpretation.
   Through knowledge of the organization and the individual, the
   machine production systems are able to distribute and manage
   information according to the logic of human production systems.  The
   other two cornerstones together improve the unity of interpretation
   among the organizational members.
       The physical architecture can adapt a number of applications,
   each of which, may not only have different knowledge presentations
   and inference mothods, but also may co-exist in the system
   simultaneously.  An integrated knowledge-based electronic messaging
   system, the AI-MAIL system, is built, tested, and evaluated through
   a case study to demonstrate the feasibility of the architecture and
   its applicability to the real-world environment.
       The three operating levels, interorganizational,
   intraorganizational, and individual, are illustrated through a study
   of the U.S.  Army.  From three large scale field studies, the
   existing AUTODIN I system, a backbone of the Army's communications,
   is analyzed and evaluated to illustrate the applicability and
   benefits of the three operating levels.
       This dissertation contributes to the field of Management
   Information Systems by offering a methodology, a taxonomy, a new
   paradigm, a framework, and a system for information management and a
   method of adaptive organizational design.  In addition, it points
   toward future research directions.  Among them are research to deal
   with ethical issues, organizational research, knowledge engineering,
   multi-processor configuration, and internal protocols for
   applications.

AN University Microfilms Order Number ADG87-16352.
AU FJELDSTAD, OYSTEIN DEVIK.
IN The University of Arizona Ph.D. 1987, 394 pages.
TI On the reapportionment of cognitive responsibilities in information
   systems.
DE Information Science.
AB     As the number of information system users increases, we are
   witnessing a related increase in the complexity and the diversity of
   their applications.  The increasing functional complexity amplifies
   the degree of functional and technical understanding required of the
   user to make productive use of the application tools.  Emerging
   technologies, increased and varied user interests and radical
   changes in the nature of applications give rise to the opportunity
   and necessity to re-examine the proper apportionment of cognitive
   responsibilities in human-system interaction.
       We present a framework for the examination of the allocation of
   cognitive responsibilities in information systems.  These cognitive
   tasks involve skills associated with the models and tools that are
   provided by information systems and the domain knowledge and problem
   knowledge that are associated with the user.  The term cognitor is
   introduced to refer to a cognitive capacity for assuming such
   responsibilities.  These capacities are resident in the human user
   and they are now feasible in information system architectures.
   Illustrations are given of how this framework can be used in
   understanding and assessing the apportionment of responsibilities.
   Implications of shifting and redistributing cognitive task from the
   system-user environment to the system environment are discussed.
   Metrics are provided to assess the degree of change under
   alternative architectures.
       An architecture for the design of alternative responsibility
   allocations, named Reapportionment of Cognitive Activities, (RCA),
   is presented.  The architecture describes knowledge and
   responsibilities associated with facilitating dynamic allocation of
   cognitive responsibilities.  Knowledge bases are used to support and
   describe alternative apportionments.  RCA illustrates how knowledge
   representations, search techniques and dialogue management can be
   combined to accommodate multiple cooperating cognitors, each
   assuming unique roles, in an effort to share the responsibilities
   associated with the use of an information system.  A design process
   for responsibility allocation is outlined.
       Examples of alternative responsibility allocation feasible
   within this architecture are provided.  Cases implementing the
   architecture are described.  We advocate treating the allocation of
   cognitive responsibilities as a design variable and illustrate
   through the architecture and the cases the elements necessary in
   reapportioning these responsibilities in information systems
   dialogues.

AN University Microfilms Order Number ADG87-13959.
AU MASTERS, GARY EVERETT.
IN North Texas State University Ph.D. 1987, 175 pages.
TI The effects of increased equipment speed on online database
   searching practices.
DE Library Science.
AB     This study reports changes in online database searching at North
   Texas State University when equipment speed was increased.  Data
   were from database vendor invoices and price and sale data of online
   equipment.  The hypotheses examined the relationship between the
   decrease in the cost of online equipment and the change to faster
   online equipment and the change in the number of databases that
   changed for online types.  The change in equipment was related to
   changes in the number of offline prints per hour, the average time
   per search, the average number of descriptors per search, the number
   of searches per month, and the rank order of database use over the
   studied period.  The increase in the number of databases with billed
   types was related to the number of online billed types produced.
   The number of prints was related to the number of billed types.
   Time spent online was examined for annual seasonal cycles.  The
   major statistical tool was time-series analysis, although other
   methods were applied.
       The conclusions were that searching practices at NTSU changed
   when the equipment changed in 1982.  The major effect was the
   increase in online types and the decrease in offline prints.  The
   number of searches per month, the number of descriptors per search,
   the rank order of databases searched, and the average time per
   search did not change.  The decrease in cost for online equipment
   was correlated to an increase in its speed and in the number of
   databases with online type charges.  This increase in type charges
   was linked to an increase in the number of online billed types and a
   decrease in prints.
       Based on the conclusions, the following specific recommendations
   were made: (1) maintain access to several database vendors, (2) use
   a modular system for searching, (3) keep complete records of search
   activities, (4) evaluate online search activities constantly, (5)
   establish and support user groups, and (6) provide continuing
   training for searchers.

AN University Microfilms Order Number ADG87-15163.
AU STANSBERY, MARY KAY MATTHEW.
IN Texas Woman's University Ph.D. 1986, 184 pages.
TI Attitudes of selected graduate faculty toward the use of library
   funds to pay for electronic access to scholarly journals.
DE Library Science.
AB     Current and future technology can affect the allocation of
   resources normally committed to the acquisition of hardcopy
   scholarly journals.  Data from the study of full-time graduate
   teaching faculty at seven academic institutions in the North Texas
   area show the effects of three variables upon their attitudes
   towards reallocation of library resources to spend less money on
   subscriptions to scholarly journals and to spend more money to pay
   for online access and searching of bibliographic and full-text
   databases with online or offline printing capabilities.  Of the
   three variables--seniority and age of faculty (tenured vs.
   non-tenured), discipline (pure science vs.  social
   science-humanities), and level and intensity of graduate degree
   granting program (master's vs.  doctoral)--the discipline in which
   the faculty members were based (pure science vs.  social
   science-humanities) proved to be the significant factor in
   accounting for differing faculty attitudes toward the issue.
       While the majority of the respondents indicated they would
   regret not having local ownership of hardcopy scholarly journals in
   their university library, the majority of them also indicated that
   they supported the use of library funds to pay for guaranteed access
   to full-text scholarly journal databases with offline or online
   printing capabilities rather than to purchase hardcopy journals to
   be housed in their university library.  This suggests the time may
   be right for academic librarians to take the lead in educating their
   faculties to today's technological and fiscal realities in the world
   of information procurement for research.  Perhaps the increasing
   application of and presence of CD-ROM technologies in libraries will
   serve to bridge the psychological gap between local ownership of
   hardcopy and the viewing of materials on a cathode ray tube (CRT) or
   computer generated printouts.

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END OF IRList Digest
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