1. Distributed multi-agent information filtering—A comparative study
- Author
-
Rajeev R. Raje, Javed Mostafa, Snehasis Mukhopadhyay, Mathew J. Palakal, and Shengquan Peng
- Subjects
Computer Networks and Communications ,Computer science ,Digital library ,computer.software_genre ,Human-Computer Interaction ,Data set ,Artificial Intelligence ,Key (cryptography) ,Collaborative filtering ,Data mining ,Information infrastructure ,computer ,Text Retrieval Conference ,Software ,Information filtering system ,Information Systems - Abstract
Information filtering is a technique to identify, in large collections, information that is relevant according to some criteria (e.g., a user's personal interests, or a research project objective). As such, it is a key technology for providing efficient user services in any large-scale information infrastructure, e.g., digital libraries. To provide large-scale information filtering services, both computational and knowledge management issues need to be addressed. A centralized (single-agent) approach to information filtering suffers from serious drawbacks in terms of speed, accuracy, and economic considerations, and becomes unrealistic even for medium-scale applications. In this article, we discuss two distributed (multi-agent) information filtering approaches, that are distributed with respect to knowledge or functionality, to overcome the limitations of single-agent centralized information filtering. Large-scale experimental studies involving the well-known TREC (Text REtrieval Conference) data set are also presented to illustrate the advantages of distributed filtering as well as to compare the different distributed approaches.
- Published
- 2005