Spring Boot vs Quarkus the ultimate battle - DevoxxUK
PATHS at VSMM 2012
1. Personalising Access
Kate Fernie, MDR Partners
Mark Stevenson, Paul Clough, Paula Goodale, Mark Hall, University of Sheffield,
Phil Archer, Konstantinos Chandrinos, iSieve Technologies
Andrea de Polo, Alinari 24 ORE,
Runar Bergheim, Avinet
Jillian Griffiths, MDR Partners
Eneko Agirre, Oier Lopez de Lacalle, University of the Basque Country
10. PATHS: project basics
• A STREP funded under the FP7
programme
• 36 months - 1st January 2011 to 31st
December 2013
• 6 partners in 5 countries
• Research
– Information access
– User centred systems development
http://www.paths-project.eu
11. Research vision
• Supporting users’
knowledge discovery
• Pathways/trails for
navigation and
exploration
• Personalisation
• Adding context
http://www.paths-project.eu
12. Trails are not a new idea
• Museums and Galleries create themed
exhibitions
13. We can do more
• Natural Language Processing
• Information Extraction
• Similarity Calculation
• Link Finding
• Personalisation
14. User Research
• Professional curators
• Interested amateurs
• Students
• Other potential users
User requirements gathering
16. Research findings
• Users like being lead • Want to make own
to new things discoveries
• Want to see what • Want to contribute
other people have their own ideas and
created content
• Like the idea of a • Want to be able to
Path choose a route
17. Research findings
• Users want to tag and comment
• Users want to communicate with Path
creators and others
• Users want to clone and edit
29. Thanks for your attention!
http://www.paths-project.eu/eng/Prototype
Follow us on:
•LinkedIn PATHS-Personalised Access to CH
spaces
•Facebook PATHS-Personalised Access to CH
spaces
•Twitter @PATHS_project
kate.fernie@mdrpartners.com
Every picture tells a story Women's Auxiliary Army Corps members, France, during World War I. This photograph, thought to be by Tom Aitken, shows four Women's Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC) members enjoying a swim on a beach in France. The WAAC was a voluntary service started in January 1917 when the loss of life among the men in the army was so great that women were needed for non-military roles. WAAC women served in both Britain and France. The newspapers liked to suggest that the WAACs in France were immoral and often becoming pregnant, but an investigation showed this to be largely unfounded rumour. [Original reads: 'OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN ON THE BRITISH WESTERN FRONT IN FRANCE. W.A.A.C's bathing on the coast somewhere in France.'] digital.nls.uk/74549132 (National Library of Scotland) 687988345_953ca34d89_o.jpg
Every picture tells a story Women's Auxiliary Army Corps members, France, during World War I. This photograph, thought to be by Tom Aitken, shows four Women's Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC) members enjoying a swim on a beach in France. The WAAC was a voluntary service started in January 1917 when the loss of life among the men in the army was so great that women were needed for non-military roles. WAAC women served in both Britain and France. The newspapers liked to suggest that the WAACs in France were immoral and often becoming pregnant, but an investigation showed this to be largely unfounded rumour. [Original reads: 'OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN ON THE BRITISH WESTERN FRONT IN FRANCE. W.A.A.C's bathing on the coast somewhere in France.'] digital.nls.uk/74549132 (National Library of Scotland) 687988345_953ca34d89_o.jpg