Princeton University |
Computer Science 598b |
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Meeting time: Tues, Thurs 3:00--4:20 PM (NOT changed though thought might)
Meeting place: Room 102 CS building
First meeting: Tuesday, February 2, 1998, 3:00 pm in Room 102 CS building.
Extra meetings: We may need to make up a class or two that we miss due to my schedule. Therefore, we may have a class during reading period.
There will be a meeting at the end of reading period for 10-minute
project reports.
Professor: Andrea LaPaugh,
304 CS Building, 258-4568,
aslp@cs.princeton.edu,
Office hours by appointment. Please send email.
Course secretary: Sandra Barbu, 323 CS building, 258-4562, barbu@cs.princeton.edu
During the 1990's there has been a tremendous expansion in the amount of information available in digital form, both through the Web and in library collections. Both the Web and large digital library collections present similar problems in the management and retrieval of information. How do the providers of search and data organization services give useful access to information? Some of the questions are sociological; many are technical. This course will study the state of the art of information access for large digital collections.
This course will cover similar material to that covered last spring in COS598b: Information Access: Issues for the Web & Digital Libraries. However, the selection of readings will be different and the students will engage in more experimental work. Students who participated in COS598b last spring are welcome to come as non-credit participants to those meeting that discuss new material.
The seminar is intended for graduate students and advanced undergraduates. Undergraduates who wish to take this seminar should have had at least one upper-level undergraduate computer science course that required the completion of a large project. Graduate students in areas other than computer science or computer engineering should have a strong background in computer science fundamentals.
Please contact Professor LaPaugh with any questions.
There are home-grown tools available for experimentation during the course and final projects. Documentation is online.