Advances in Information Retrieval. 32nd European Conference on IR Research, ECIR 2010 Milton Keynes, UK, March 28‐31 2010 Proceedings

Clare Thornley (Dept. of Information Studies, University College London, London, UK)

Journal of Documentation

ISSN: 0022-0418

Article publication date: 2 March 2012

125

Keywords

Citation

Thornley, C. (2012), "Advances in Information Retrieval. 32nd European Conference on IR Research, ECIR 2010 Milton Keynes, UK, March 28‐31 2010 Proceedings", Journal of Documentation, Vol. 68 No. 2, pp. 270-270. https://doi.org/10.1108/00220411211209249

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


This publication provides an excellent “state of the art” review and description of recent developments and improvements within information retrieval (IR). It is very broad ranging in its coverage and the contributions are organised under the following headings: NLP and text mining; web IR; evaluation; multi media IR; distributed IR and performance issues; IR theory and formal models; personalisation and recommendation; domain specific IR and cross language IR; user issues. It also includes abstracts of invited talks on emerging issues including collaborative web searching, the impact of visualisation technology on NLP and developments in automatic image annotation for multimedia IR. A fuller description of these talks or a clear reference to relevant papers would have been useful. Finally it includes posters and a description of some demonstrations of new IR systems.

The content is, as one would expect from this conference, more in the computer science than library and information science tradition, and some of it may be too technical for some LIS students. It does, however, provide a thorough and well presented overview of recent developments. The introduction is a masterful analysis of the key topics covered which carefully links them with previous work as well as clearly highlighting what the new developments are. An essential text for those working in IR research and a useful guide for students to the breadth of IR research topics currently under investigation.

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