Ex Ante Evaluations of Alternate Data Structures for End User Queries

2004 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 45-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul L. Bowen ◽  
Fiona H. Rohde ◽  
Jay Basford
2008 ◽  
pp. 2096-2123
Author(s):  
Paul L. Bowen ◽  
Fiona H. Rohde ◽  
Jay Basford

The data structure of an information system can significantly impact the ability of end users to efficiently and effectively retrieve the information they need. This research develops a methodology for evaluating, ex ante, the relative desirability of alternative data structures for end user queries. This research theorizes that the data structure that yields the lowest weighted average complexity for a representative sample of information requests is the most desirable data structure for end user queries. The theory was tested in an experiment that compared queries from two different relational database schemas. As theorized, end users querying the data structure associated with the less complex queries performed better. Complexity was measured using three different Halstead metrics. Each of the three metrics provided excellent predictions of end user performance. This research supplies strong evidence that organizations can use complexity metrics to evaluate, ex ante, the desirability of alternate data structures. Organizations can use these evaluations to enhance the efficient and effective retrieval of information by creating data structures that minimize end user query complexity.


2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Χρήστος Τρυφωνόπουλος

Much information of interest to humans is today available on the Web. People can easily gain access to information but at the same time, they have to cope with the problem of information overload. Consequently, they have to rely on specialised tools and systems designed for searching, querying and retrieving information from the Web. Currently, Web search is controlled by a few search engines that are assigned the burden to follow this information explosion by utilising centralised search infrastructures. Additionally, users are striving to stay informed by sifting through enormous amounts of new information, and by relying on tools and techniques that are not able to capture the dynamic nature of the Web. In this setting, peer-to-peer Web search seems an ideal candidate that can offer adaptivity to high dynamics, scalability, resilience to failures and leverage the functionality of the traditional search engine to offer new features and services. In this thesis, we study the problem of peer-to-peer resource sharing in wide-area networks such as the Internet and the Web. In the architecture that we envision, each peer owns resources which it is willing to share: documents, web pages or files that are appropriately annotated and queried using constructs from information retrieval models. There are two kinds of basic functionality that we expect this architecture to offer: information retrieval and information filtering (also known as publish/subscribe or information dissemination). The main focus of our work is on providing models and languages for expressing publications, queries and subscriptions, protocols that regulate peer interactions in this distributed environment and indexing mechanisms that are utilized locally by each one of the peers.Initially, we present three progressively more expressive data models, WP, AWP and AWPS, that are based on information retrieval concepts and their respective query languages. Then, we study the complexity of query satisfiability and entailment for models WP and AWP using techniques from propositional logic and computational complexity. Subsequently, we propose a peer-to-peer architecture designed to support fullfledged information retrieval and filtering functionality in a single unifying framework. In the context of this architecture, we focus on the problem of information filtering using the model AWPS, and present centralised and distributed algorithmsfor efficient, adaptive information filtering in a peer-to-peer environment. We use two levels of indexing to store queries submitted by users. The first level corresponds to the partitioning of the global query index to different peers using a distributed hash table as the underlying routing infrastructure. Each node is responsible for a fraction of the submitted user queries through a mapping of attribute values to peer identifiers. The distributed hash table infrastructure is used to define the mapping scheme and also manages the routing of messages between different nodes. Our set of protocols, collectively called DHTrie, extend the basic functionality of the distributed hash table to offer filtering functionality in a dynamic peer-to-peer environment. Additionally, the use of a self-maintainable routing table allows efficient communication between the peers, offering significantly lower network load and latency. This extra routing table uses only local informationcollected by each peer to speed up the retrieval and filtering process. The second level of our indexing mechanism is managed locally by each peer, and is used for indexing the user queries the peer is responsible for. In this level of the index, each peer is able to store large numbers of user queries and match them against incoming documents. We have proposed data structures and localindexing algorithms that enable us to solve the filtering problem efficiently for large databases of queries. The main idea behind these algorithms is to store sets of words compactly by exploiting their common elements using trie-like data structures. Since these algorithms use heuristics to cluster user queries, we also consider the periodic re-organisation of the query database when the clustering of queries deteriorates. Our experimental results show the scalability and efficiency of the proposed algorithms in a dynamic setting. The distributed protocols manage to provide exact query answering functionality (precision and recall are the same as those of a centralised system) at a low network cost and low latency. Additionally, the local algorithms we have proposed outperform solutions in the current literature. Our trie-based query indexing algorithms proved more than 20% faster than their counterparts, offering sophisticated clustering of user queries and mechanisms for the adaptive reorganisation of the query database when filtering performance drops.


2006 ◽  
Vol 7 (8) ◽  
pp. 514-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Bowen ◽  
◽  
Robert O'Farrell ◽  
Fiona Rohde ◽  
◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Simon ◽  
Keith J. Holyoak

Abstract Cushman characterizes rationalization as the inverse of rational reasoning, but this distinction is psychologically questionable. Coherence-based reasoning highlights a subtler form of bidirectionality: By distorting task attributes to make one course of action appear superior to its rivals, a patina of rationality is bestowed on the choice. This mechanism drives choice and action, rather than just following in their wake.


Author(s):  
Tosha B. Wetterneck ◽  
Pascale Carayon ◽  
Folasade Sobande ◽  
Ann Schoofs Hundt

1994 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 127
Author(s):  
X.-B. Lu ◽  
F. Stetter
Keyword(s):  

ICIT Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-226
Author(s):  
Eka Fitri Rahayu

Informasi sangat dibutuhkan dalam pengambilan keputusan. Sistem informasi yang efektif adalah sistem informasi yang harus mampu memberikan kepuasan kepada para penggunanya. Tujuan dari penelitian ini adalah untuk mengetahui pengaruh model End User Computing Satisfaction (EUCS) dengan Instrumen Accuracy, Content, Format, Timeliness dan Ease of Use terhadap kepuasan pengguna sistem UG In Your Hand. Data yang digunakan sebanyak 96 responden yang diperoleh melalui kuesioner online yang dibagikan kepada Mahasiswa. Metode penelitian menggunakan model Regresi Linier Berganda. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa Instrumen Ease of Use dan Timeliness mempengaruhi kepuasan pengguna sistem, selain itu Instrumen Content, Accuracy dan Format tidak mempengaruhi kepuasan pengguna sistem UG In Your Hand.   Kata Kunci : Kepuasan Pengguna, UG In Your Hand, Metode EUCS


2018 ◽  
pp. 34-39
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Kluza
Keyword(s):  

W trakcie procesu budżetowego występuje szereg nieefektywności, tym silniejszych, im większe jest dane przedsiębiorstwo. Jednym z powszechnych zjawisk jest ukrywanie przez pracowników informacji o faktycznych możliwościach rozwoju biznesu, aby negocjować jak najniższe poziomy celów do swych systemów motywacyjnych. Wpływa to bezpośrednio na spadek tempa rozwoju danej instytucji lub wzrost jej kosztów działania. W niniejszym opracowaniu przedstawiony jest model systemu motywacyjnego, który zapobiega przyjmowaniu zaniżonych celów do budżetów. Jego istotą jest wprowadzenie do mechanizmu premiowania parametru ambitności, określanego ex ante na etapie zatwierdzania celów. Odpowiednie ukształtowanie parametrów macierzy współczynnika ambitności, realizacji planu oraz stawek wynagrodzenia zmiennego sprawia, iż najlepszą strategią dla pracownika jest zgłaszanie do budżetu celów zgodnych z jego faktycznymi możliwościami realizacji.


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