Exploring Data with Minimal Effort

When: Wednesday, May 2, 2012 - 9:40am - 11:00am
Where: KEC 1007

Speaker Title/Description:
   Arash Termehchy
   Ph.D. student
   Department of Computer Science
   University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Speaker Biography: Arash Termehchy is a Ph.D. student at the Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign under the supervision of Marianne Winslett. His research interest is in data and information management in a broad sense, including large scale data management, human centric data management, data trustworthiness, social data management, data mining, and semantic Web. He is the recipient of the ICDE'11 best student paper award, the ICDE'11 best papers selection, the Yahoo! Key Scientific Challenges award, and the Feng Chen Memorial award.

Abstract:
Current data search and exploration paradigms fall short of providing usable, 
effective, efficient, robust, and economical search and exploration 
experiences. For instance, Web search engines do not effectively satisfy 
complex information needs. Although database query languages such as SQL are 
intended for expressing complex information needs, the languages are too hard 
to use, and the underlying databases are too maintenance-intensive, to be 
viable bases for an effective Big Data infrastructure.  In my research, I have 
set forth solid theoretical foundations for a usable, effective, robust, and 
economical data search and exploration experience and developed large scale 
systems that provide such an experience.

In this talk, I will argue that keyword and natural language query interfaces 
should use deep meta-data information to effectively rank the results of 
queries. I also postulate that search results from keyword and natural language 
query interfaces should not depend on how the underlying data sets are 
organized. I show that current query interfaces do not adhere to these 
principles. I describe a series of large scale search and exploration systems 
that embody and validate these principles through extensive user studies over 
real world data.
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