Space Travel News  
Beyond Books: Virginia Tech Libraries In The Digital Age

Ryan Richardson has developed a program that creates graphical concept maps of the information inside theses, dissertations, or other books. Along with giving a more accurate representation of the information inside the manuscript, Richardson said, organizing dissertation information into concept maps makes it easier to use translation programs to search through papers in other languages.
by Staff Writers
Blacksburg VA (SPX) Nov 29, 2007
A fisherman catches something he can't identify. He photographs it with his cell phone, sends the image to a database, and is able to identify what's in his boat--all before going ashore, where he can use a tablet PC to show the results to his friends and family.

The technology to make such identifications is being developed in a project on archiving digital images led by Virginia Tech computer science Professor Edward A. Fox, working with fisheries and wildlife science Department Head Eric M. Hallerman and Professor Ricardo da Silva Torres of the Institute of Computing at the University of Campinas, Brazil.

Fox, who is director of both the Digital Library Research Laboratory and the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations, is using a variety of digital technologies to allow people to store and retrieve information in new, ever more accessible ways.

His work has drawn the attention, and financial support, of Google, Microsoft, IBM, and Sun Microsystems, among others. Both Microsoft and Google have donated money to Virginia Tech this year specifically to support research overseen by Fox.

Microsoft is funding the project described above, which in the short term could benefit anglers or scientists who study fish, and down the road could lead to a whole new way of searching for information based on visual clues. Fish were chosen as a test subject because their telltale fins can convey identifiable information even if the entire animal is not visible, Fox said.

A separate, Google-funded project in which Fox is involved has grown out of the dissertation work of Ryan Richardson, who remains at Virginia Tech as a postdoctoral associate. Their project has the potential to make it easier for scholars to sift though the hundreds of thousands of pages of dissertations in their fields to find the particular information they need for their own work.

Online dissertation archives have made it easier for academics to find information, but the process is not perfect. Dissertations are discovered and selected based on the information in their abstracts, but those are mere summaries of lengthier works.

It's quite possible that a researcher might overlook a chapter that had relevant information inside it but which is not discussed in the abstract, Richardson explained.

To address that problem, Richardson has developed a program that creates graphical concept maps of the information inside theses, dissertations, or other books. Along with giving a more accurate representation of the information inside the manuscript, Richardson said, organizing dissertation information into concept maps makes it easier to use translation programs to search through papers in other languages.

Fox describes his research as helping to reduce barriers to sharing information-a way of realizing the ancient mission of the library in new ways-through technology.

"Books came about to help person to person communication span space and time," Fox said. "We're still doing the same thing. We're getting people to communicate. It's a fundamental thing. I don't think it will ever go away."

At higher-education institutions, research like that done by Fox is often advanced with private support from corporations like Microsoft and Google. Increasing the amount of such support at Virginia Tech is one of the major goals of a $1 billion fundraising campaign that was launched Oct. 20.

With a total goal of $1 billion, The Campaign for Virginia Tech: Invent the Future marks a new era in private fundraising for the most comprehensive university in the Commonwealth of Virginia. The campaign's funding priorities target five goals: academic excellence, the undergraduate experience, research facilities, Virginia Tech and the community, and the President's Discovery Fund, a pool of unrestricted funds.

Related Links
Virginia Tech (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University)
Satellite-based Internet technologies



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Bee Strategy Helps Servers Run More Sweetly
Atlanta GA (SPX) Nov 20, 2007
Honeybees somehow manage to efficiently collect a lot of nectar with limited resources and no central command - after all, the queen bee is too busy laying eggs to oversee something as mundane as where the best nectar can be found on any given morning. According to new research from the Georgia Institute of Technology, the swarm intelligence of these amazingly organized bees can also be used to improve the efficiency of Internet servers faced with similar challenges.







  • Defense Focus: Engineer truths -- Part 1
  • Northrop Grumman Demonstrates New Rocket Engine Design Using Oxygen And Methane Propellants
  • Indigenous Cryogenic Stage Successfully Qualified
  • Groundbreaking Signals Start Of NASA Constellation Flight Tests

  • Sea Launch Reschedules The Thuraya-3 Launch Campaign
  • Sea Launch Reschedules The Thuraya-3 Launch Campaign
  • Thuraya-3 Satellite Launch Delayed Again
  • Russia To Launch Manned Spacecraft From New Site In 2018

  • Shuttle Flight Readiness Review This Week
  • Fairford Airmen Prepare For Shuttle Launch
  • US Lawmakers Grill Space Agency On Plans For Shuttle Retirement
  • Atlantis At The Pad

  • Spacewalkers Complete More Harmony Hookup Work
  • Columbus Poised For Research Breakthroughs
  • US astronauts walk in space to fix up lab
  • Expedition 16 Completes Spacewalk

  • Jogging To Mars
  • SPACEHAB Supporting Key Milestones Under NASA Space Act Agreement
  • Brazil to invest 28 bln dollars in science and technology: Lula
  • Orbital Outfitters Debuts IS3C - First-Ever Fully Functional Commercial Pressure Spacesuit

  • China Completes Enclosure Of Land For Fourth Satellite Launch Center
  • China Has No Timetable For Manned Moon Landing
  • Chinese plan manned space launch
  • New Rocket Set To Blast Off By 2013

  • Humanoid teaches dentists to feel people's pain: researchers
  • Japan looks at everyday use of robots
  • New Japanese lightweight robot on wheels can talk
  • Can A Robot Find A Rock. Interview With David Wettergreen: Part IV

  • Rover Slips In Sandy Terrain
  • New Views Of Martian Moons
  • HiRISE Camera Views Spirit At Home Plate
  • Life on Mars - Viking Revisited

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement