The Informedia Digital Library is an ongoing research program at Carnegie Mellon University to build search engines and information visualization technology for many types of media.[1][2]
The program has carried out research on spoken document retrieval, video information retrieval, video segmentation, face recognition, and cross-language information retrieval.
The Lycos search engine was an early product of the Informedia Digital Library Project.
The project is led by Howard Wactlar. Researchers on the project have included: Michael Mauldin, Alex Hauptmann, Michael Christel, Michael Witbrock, Raj Reddy, Takeo Kanade and Scott Stevens.
References
edit- ^ the Informedia initiatives Archived 2007-06-10 at the Wayback Machine 1994-2008 Carnegie Mellon.
- ^ Alexander G. Hauptmann (1997). "Artificial Intelligence Techniques in the Interface to a Digital Video Library" Archived 2007-06-10 at the Wayback Machine. Proceedings of the CHI-97 Computer-Human Interface Conference, New Orleans, LA, March 1997.
Further reading
edit- Xiuqi Li and Borko Furht. "DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF DIGITAL LIBRARIES".
- Howard D. Wactlar (1996). "Intelligent Access to Digital Video: Informedmia Project".