Blog Archive: 2009

First squares, now circles

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A while ago, Google introduced Google Squared, an attempt to help people keep track of different aspects in their search results. I think that it’s an interesting HCIR idea that still lacks a good implementation, as I’ve written here and here. Recently, Google introduced a means of adding results informed by the searcher’s social network, which Google has dubbed “Social Circle.” I spent some time playing with it, and found it lacking.

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Large Scale Image Annotation

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I just attended ACM Multimedia 2009 in Beijing to present a paper on image annotation in the workshop on Large Scale Multimedia Retrieval and Mining. The multimedia research community is grappling with a dramatic increase in the scale of its information management problems in an era of rapid growth in user-generated content and negligible distribution costs (i.e. YouTube and flickr).  The workshop itself devoted attention to both retrieval and mining, while the content track of the main conference seemed to be dominated by search applications.

When the observation is made that tagged multimedia data is now freely and abundantly available, it’s usually to motivate papers on media search rather than annotation.  This is in part due to the challenges of adapting established model-based annotation methods to large media collections and large tag sets.  Alternatively, search-based annotation achieves scalability at the expense of accuracy, at least in comparison to model-based approaches.    Our workshop paper looked to combine the efficiency of search-based approaches with the accuracy afforded by model-based classification. Continue Reading

Ben Shneiderman on HCIR

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Last week I was in DC at the HCIR 2009 workshop organized by Bill Kules, Daniel Tunkelang, and Ryen White. This was the third workshop in the series, and by far the biggest and most diverse in terms of attendees. Proceedings are available online. Daniel and Max Wilson have already given pretty good coverage to what happened at the workshop, so I will focus on my impressions, starting with Ben Shneiderman‘s keynote.

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“Authoritarian Governments in Cyberspace”

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A while ago I wrote about Evgeny Morozov’s Stanford talk (“Authoritarian Governments in Cyberspace”) about the use of social networking and other technology by authoritarian governments. While the Stanford talk was in some ways similar to his TED talk, it had more content and a slightly different focus. For those interested in the details, here’s a link to the slides.

While the slides were meant to illustrate rather than to echo the talk, they draw considerably on sources available on the web that could be followed up with a simple search.  It will be interesting to watch this space over the next few years as technology evolves and as governments get even more sophisticated.  While much of the effort that Morozov documents is aimed at controlling citizens of these regimes, the core competencies involved are also central to cyber-warfare.

Marking Up a World: Physical Markup for Virtual Content Creation

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FXPAL’s Pantheia system enables users to create virtual models by ‘marking up’ a physical scene with pre-printed visual markers and then taking pictures. The meanings associated with the markers come from a markup language that enables users to specify geometric, appearance, or interactive aspects of the model that are then used by the system to construct the model.  Our “Marking up the World” video appeared at ACM Multimedia this week. In the video you can see how our system works, our viewer features, and a selection of the spaces and objects we have used the system to reconstruct.

Thanks much to Qiong Liu for presenting it, and to John Doherty for putting it together from our clips and for narrating it. The geometric reconstruction work I spoke about last week as part of the Bay Area Mathematical Adventures series was inspired by the issues we discovered while building the system. For more details on our work, see the paper we presented at CGVR ’09 Interactive Models from Images of a Static Scene.

Talk at NIST on collaborative search

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I am giving a talk today at NIST on collaborative search. Abstract:

In the library sciences, information seeking has long been recognized as a collaborative activity, and recent work has attempted to model group information seeking behavior. Until recently, technological support for group-based information seeking has been limited to collaborative filtering and “social search” applications. In the past two years, however, a new kind of technologically-mediated collaborative search has been demonstrated in systems such as SearchTogether and Cerchiamo. This approach is more closely grounded in the library science interpretation of collaboration: rather than inferring commonality of interest through similarity of queries (social search), the new approach assumes an explicitly-shared information need for a group. This allows the system to focus on mediating the collaboration rather than detecting its presence. In this talk, we describe a model that captures both user behavior and system architecture, describe its relationship to other models of information seeking, and use it to classify existing multi-user search systems. We also describe implications this model has for design and evaluation of new collaborative information seeking systems.

Slides:

There are references in the slides.

Securing the identity of a past FXPAL researcher

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Volker Roth left FXPAL last year to become a professor at Freie Universität Berlin. There he leads the Secure Identity Research Group, which takes a user centered approach to addressing security and privacy issues related to mobile devices, cloud computing, and the internet.

He and his group have gotten press recently due to a well-publicized celebration of the opening of their new building. There are some great photos of Volker at this opening on the  Bundesdruckerei web site (Bundesdruckerei endowed the position Volker filled and provides other support for the group).  On the same site is a picture of Volker hobnobbing with Horst Köhler, the president of Germany, and his wife! It is great to see Volker thriving.

More mathematical adventures

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In early August I thumbed through a copy of The New Yorker idly wondering which article I’d like to read when the name “Glen Whitney” popped out. A close friend of mine from graduate school is named Glen Whitney. Could it be the same person? Sure enough, with the article called Math-hattan, it had to be! The article talks about his efforts to create a math museum and describes the math tours he is currently giving of Manhattan.

The museum itself is still in the planning stages, but the exhibit Math Midway gathered a lot of press during its tour this summer. I love the picture of Glen riding the square wheeled tricycle that’s part of the exhibit. (Before looking at the pictures, how did they succeed in making the ride smooth?) Like the  Bay Area Mathematical Adventures series, this exhibit is great outreach. I hope eventually it will come west.

In graduate school, I found Glen’s enthusiasm for many things, particularly for mathematics, inspiring and infectious. It is great to see him so successfully pursuing this dream.

Controversies on tap

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Panels at academic conferences are often worth attending because they are not as well represented in the proceedings as paper presentations. There is the aspect of a good performance, as well, that can make the experience entertaining, provocative, and (perhaps) even informative. For the conference organizers’ perspective, then, the issue is how to create engaging panels. Ingredients that should be considered include controversial topics and articulate, provocative performers.

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