1992
Authors
RIBEIRO, C;
Publication
SIGPLAN NOTICES
Abstract
2011
Authors
da Silva, JR; Lopes, JC; Ribeiro, C;
Publication
Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Digital Preservation, iPRES 2011, Singapore, November 1-4, 2011
Abstract
2010
Authors
Devezas, JoseLuis; Ribeiro, Cristina; Nunes, Sergio;
Publication
Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on Social Network Mining and Analysis, SNAKDD 2009, Paris, France, June 28, 2009
Abstract
The study of the blogosphere can provide sociologically relevant data. We analyze the links between blogs in the portuguese blogosphere, in order to understand how they group and interact, to identify clusters and to characterize them. Our data set contains post data for more than 70,000 blogs, with over 400,000 links. The linkage data is represented as a blog graph and partitioned into several slices, according to their in-degree. We then study the evolution of blog features, and observe a consistent pattern of decrease in posting frequency, number of out-links, and post length, as we move from the highly-cited blogs to the less cited ones. Copyright 2010 ACM.
1994
Authors
Ribeiro, C; Porto, A;
Publication
Temporal Logic, First International Conference, ICTL '94, Bonn, Germany, July 11-14, 1994, Proceedings
Abstract
2011
Authors
Lopes, CT; Ribeiro, C;
Publication
ONLINE INFORMATION REVIEW
Abstract
Purpose - The intent of this work is to evaluate several generalist and health-specific search engines for retrieval of health information by consumers: to compare the retrieval effectiveness of these engines for different types of clinical queries, medical specialties and condition severity; and to compare the use of evaluation metrics for binary relevance scales and for graded ones. Design/methodology/approach - The authors conducted a study in which users evaluated the relevance of documents retrieved by four search engines for two different health information needs. Users could choose between generalist (Bing, Google, Sapo and Yahoo!) and health-specific (MedlinePlus, SapoSande and WebMD) search engines. The authors then analysed the differences between search engines and groups of information needs with six different measures: graded average precision (gap), average precision (ap), gap@5, gap@10, ap@5 and ap@10. Findings The results show that generalist web search engines surpass the precision of health-specific engines. Google has the best performance, mainly in the top ten results. It was found that information needs associated with severe conditions are associated with higher precision, as are overview and psychiatry questions. Originality/value - The study is one of the first to use a recently proposed measure to evaluate the effectiveness of retrieval systems with graded relevance scales. It includes tasks from several medical specialties, types of clinical questions and different levels of severity which, to the best of the authors' knowledge, has not been clone before. Moreover, users have considerable involvement in the experiment. The results help in understanding how search engines differ in their responses to health information needs, what types of online health information are more common on the web and how to improve this type of search.
2011
Authors
Ribeiro, C; Fernandes, EM;
Publication
IASSIST 2011 - Data Science Professionals: A Global Community of Sharing, Vancouver, BC, Canada, May 31 - June 3, 2011
Abstract
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