Shannon Lecture Series: Nov. 16, 2006.
The next generation Web Search: From Information Retrieval to Information Supply
Presented by: Dr. Andrei Broder , Fellow & VP Emerging Search, Yahoo! Research

Abstract of Talk.

In the past decade, Web search engines have evolved from a first generation based on classic Information Retrieval (IR) algorithms scaled to web size and thus supporting only informational queries, to a second generation supporting navigational queries using web specific information (primarily link analysis), to a third generation enabling transactional and other " semantic " queries based on a variety of technologies aimed to directly satisfy the unexpressed " user intent." What is coming next? In this talk, we argue for the trend towards context driven Information Supply (IS), that is, the goal of Web IR will widen to include the supply of relevant information from multiple sources without requiring the user to make an explicit query. The information supply concept greatly precedes information retrieval. What is new in the web framework, is the ability to supply relevant information specific to a given activity and a given user, while the activity is being performed. A prime example is the matching of ads to content being read, however the information supply paradigm is starting to appear in other contexts such as social networks, e-commerce, browsers, e-mail, and others.

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About the Speaker.

Andrei Broder is a Yahoo! Research Fellow and Vice President of Emerging Search Technology. Previously he was an IBM Distinguished Engineer and the CTO of the Institute for Search and Text Analysis in IBM Research. From 1999 until early 2002 he was Vice President for Research and Chief Scientist at the AltaVista Company. He was graduated Summa cum Laude from Technion and did his Ph.D. in Computer Science at Stanford University under Don Knuth. Broder is co-winner of the Best Paper award at WWW6 (for his work on duplicate elimination of web pages) and at WWW9 (for his work on mapping the web). He has published more than seventy papers and was awarded twenty patents. He is an IEEE fellow and served as chair of the IEEE Technical Committee on Mathematical Foundations of Computing.

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