One change I'm thinking of making to this blog is to introduce "quick bites" as a way of mentioning interesting sites or articles I've come across without going into deep analysis. Here's a first one to give you a flavor of the concept. Let me know what you think.
I just read an article on how courts will tolerate search inaccuracies in e-Discovery by way of Curt Monash. It reminded me of our recent discussion of transparency in information retrieval. I agree that "explanations of [search] algorithms are of questionable value" for convincing a court of the relevance and accuracy of the results. But that's because those algorithms aren't sufficiently intuitive for those explanations to be meaningful except in a theoretical sense to an information retreival researcher.
I realize that user-entered Boolean queries (the traditional approach to e-Discovery) aren't effective because users aren't great at composing queries for set retrieval. But that's why machines need to help users with query elaboration--a topic for an upcoming post.
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Monday, September 1, 2008
Quick Bites: E-Discovery and Transparency
One change I'm thinking of making to this blog is to introduce "quick bites" as a way of mentioning interesting sites or articles I've come across without going into deep analysis. Here's a first one to give you a flavor of the concept. Let me know what you think.
I just read an article on how courts will tolerate search inaccuracies in e-Discovery by way of Curt Monash. It reminded me of our recent discussion of transparency in information retrieval. I agree that "explanations of [search] algorithms are of questionable value" for convincing a court of the relevance and accuracy of the results. But that's because those algorithms aren't sufficiently intuitive for those explanations to be meaningful except in a theoretical sense to an information retreival researcher.
I realize that user-entered Boolean queries (the traditional approach to e-Discovery) aren't effective because users aren't great at composing queries for set retrieval. But that's why machines need to help users with query elaboration--a topic for an upcoming post.
I just read an article on how courts will tolerate search inaccuracies in e-Discovery by way of Curt Monash. It reminded me of our recent discussion of transparency in information retrieval. I agree that "explanations of [search] algorithms are of questionable value" for convincing a court of the relevance and accuracy of the results. But that's because those algorithms aren't sufficiently intuitive for those explanations to be meaningful except in a theoretical sense to an information retreival researcher.
I realize that user-entered Boolean queries (the traditional approach to e-Discovery) aren't effective because users aren't great at composing queries for set retrieval. But that's why machines need to help users with query elaboration--a topic for an upcoming post.
2 comments:
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I like the change, but I also hope you keep the longer posts.
- September 3, 2008 at 4:07 PM
- Daniel Tunkelang said...
-
Thanks for the feedback. I'll try to mix it up.
- September 3, 2008 at 11:43 PM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Monday, September 1, 2008
Quick Bites: E-Discovery and Transparency
One change I'm thinking of making to this blog is to introduce "quick bites" as a way of mentioning interesting sites or articles I've come across without going into deep analysis. Here's a first one to give you a flavor of the concept. Let me know what you think.
I just read an article on how courts will tolerate search inaccuracies in e-Discovery by way of Curt Monash. It reminded me of our recent discussion of transparency in information retrieval. I agree that "explanations of [search] algorithms are of questionable value" for convincing a court of the relevance and accuracy of the results. But that's because those algorithms aren't sufficiently intuitive for those explanations to be meaningful except in a theoretical sense to an information retreival researcher.
I realize that user-entered Boolean queries (the traditional approach to e-Discovery) aren't effective because users aren't great at composing queries for set retrieval. But that's why machines need to help users with query elaboration--a topic for an upcoming post.
I just read an article on how courts will tolerate search inaccuracies in e-Discovery by way of Curt Monash. It reminded me of our recent discussion of transparency in information retrieval. I agree that "explanations of [search] algorithms are of questionable value" for convincing a court of the relevance and accuracy of the results. But that's because those algorithms aren't sufficiently intuitive for those explanations to be meaningful except in a theoretical sense to an information retreival researcher.
I realize that user-entered Boolean queries (the traditional approach to e-Discovery) aren't effective because users aren't great at composing queries for set retrieval. But that's why machines need to help users with query elaboration--a topic for an upcoming post.
2 comments:
-
-
I like the change, but I also hope you keep the longer posts.
- September 3, 2008 at 4:07 PM
- Daniel Tunkelang said...
-
Thanks for the feedback. I'll try to mix it up.
- September 3, 2008 at 11:43 PM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
I like the change, but I also hope you keep the longer posts.
Thanks for the feedback. I'll try to mix it up.
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