Catálogo de publicaciones - revistas
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
A journal of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), which publishes surveys, tutorials, and special reports on all areas of computing research. Volumes are published yearly in four issues appearing in March, June, September, and December.Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
No disponibles.
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Período | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | desde mar. 1969 / hasta dic. 2023 | ACM Digital Library |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
revistas
ISSN impreso
0360-0300
ISSN electrónico
1557-7341
Editor responsable
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
País de edición
Estados Unidos
Fecha de publicación
1969-
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Rough'n'Ready
Francis Kubala; Sean Colbath; Daben Liu; John Makhoul
Palabras clave: General Computer Science; Theoretical Computer Science.
Pp. 7
Dynamic collaborator discovery in information intensive environments
David Payton; Mike Daily; Kevin Martin
Palabras clave: General Computer Science; Theoretical Computer Science.
Pp. 8
Informedia Experience-on-Demand
Howard D. Wactlar; Michael G. Christel; Alexander G. Hauptmann; Yihong Gong
<jats:p>The Informedia Experience-on-Demand system uses speech, image, and natural language processing combined with GPS information to capture, integrate, and communicate personal multimedia experiences. This paper discusses in initial prototype of the EOD system.</jats:p>
Palabras clave: General Computer Science; Theoretical Computer Science.
Pp. 9
Task-based information management
Michael Wolverton
<jats:p>Effective collaboration in fast-changing environment can put great dem ands on a collaborator's time. Therefore, information retrieval and filtering tools for these environments should impose as little on that time as possible. Not only should they exclude as many irrelevant documents as possible from those presented to the user (to avoid the time wasted sorting through and reading those documents), they should also minimize the user's effort in characterizing his or her information needs. The goal of the Task-based Information Distribution Environment (TIDE) system is to achieve these objectives by explicitly representing each collaborator's current task and using those representations to deliver documents that meet the information needs implied by those tasks. It does this by treating information gathering as a diagnosis problem, in which the situation (i.e., the current state of beliefs about various questions related to a task) leads probabilistically to test that will provide the most evidence toward reaching a diagnosis (i.e., a description of the documents most likely to be useful to that task). It encodes tasks as nodes in a Bayesian network, and computes document descriptions based on the probabilistic relationship among tasks and their corresponding information requirements.</jats:p>
Palabras clave: General Computer Science; Theoretical Computer Science.
Pp. 10
Interface issues in computer support for asynchronous communication
James H. Morris; Christine M. Neuwirth; Susan Harkness Regli; Ravinder Chandhok; Geoffrey C. Wenger
Palabras clave: General Computer Science; Theoretical Computer Science.
Pp. 11
Integration of synchronous and asynchronous collaboration activities
Larry S. Jackson; Ed Grossman
<jats:p>The inegrated synchronous and asynchronous collaboration (ISAAC) project [1] is constructing a communication and collaboration system to bridge traditional workgroup barriers of time and space. Possible applications include military command and control, corporate real-time collaboration, and distributed teams of research scientists. Thus, this system must host the widest possible range of applications, and must run on heterogeneous hardware.</jats:p> <jats:p>ISAAC incorporates real-time (synchronous) collaboration technologies developed by the Habanero® project [2,3] at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, with asynchronous extensions. ISAAC research is aimed at moving information between synchronous and asynchronous modes. ISAAC's session capture conceptually transforms a real-time multiple tool collaboration into multimedia document, which can be analyzed and reused by other programs. Automated segmentation and indexing of captured audio and videoteleconference traffic adds further information.</jats:p>
Palabras clave: General Computer Science; Theoretical Computer Science.
Pp. 12
Consistency management for distributed collaboration
Jonathan Rees; Sarah Ferguson; Sankar Virdhagriswaran
Palabras clave: General Computer Science; Theoretical Computer Science.
Pp. 13
Intermediary Architecture
Craig Thompson; Paul Pazandak; Venu Vasudevan; Frank Manola; Mark Palmer; Gil Hansen; Tom Bannon
<jats:p> This paper describes the <jats:italic>Intermediary Architecture</jats:italic> , a middleware architecture which interposes distributed object services between Web client and server. The architecture extends current Web architectures with a new kind of plug-in, making a new colleciton of Web applications easier to develop. Example services including Web annotations and Web performance monitoring are described. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: General Computer Science; Theoretical Computer Science.
Pp. 14
Evaluation for collaborative systems
Laurie Damianos; Lynette Hirschman; Robyn Kozierok; Jeffrey Kurtz; Andrew Greenberg; Kimberley Walls; Sharon Laskowski; Jean Scholtz
Palabras clave: General Computer Science; Theoretical Computer Science.
Pp. 15
Re-configurable distributed scripting
M. Ranganathan; Laurent Andrey; Virginie Schaal; Jean-Philippe Favreau
<jats:p>Several distributed testing, control and collaborative applications are reactive or event driven in nature. Such applications can be structured as a set of handlers that react to events and that in turn can trigger other events. We have developed an application building toolkit that facilitates development of such applications. Our system is based on the concept of Mobile Streams. Applications developed in our system are dynamically extensible and re-configurable and our system provides the application designer a mechanism to control extension and re-configuration. We describe our system model and give examples of its use.</jats:p>
Palabras clave: General Computer Science; Theoretical Computer Science.
Pp. 16