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A generic alerting service for digital libraries
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Source International Conference on Digital Libraries archive
Proceedings of the 5th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries table of contents
Denver, CO, USA
SESSION: Tools & techniques track: recommending and alerting table of contents
Pages: 131 - 140  
Year of Publication: 2005
ISBN:1-58113-876-8
Authors
George Buchanan  UCL Interaction Centre, London, UK
Annika Hinze  University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand
Sponsors
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
SIGIR: ACM Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval
SIGWEB: ACM Special Interest Group on Hypertext, Hypermedia, and Web
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 10,   Downloads (12 Months): 59,   Citation Count: 7
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ABSTRACT

Users of modern digital libraries (DLs) can keep themselves up-to-date by searching and browsing their favorite collections, or more conveniently by resorting to an alerting service. The alerting service notifies its clients about new or changed documents. Proprietary and mediating alerting services fail to fluidly integrate information from differing collections. This paper analyses the conceptual requirements of this much-sought after service for digital libraries. We demonstrate that the differing concepts of digital libraries and its underlying technical design has extensive influence (a) the expectations, needs and interests of users regarding an alerting service, and (b) on the technical possibilities of the implementation of the service. Our findings will show that the range of issues surrounding alerting services for digital libraries, their design and use is greater than one may anticipate. We also show that, conversely, the requirements for an alerting service have considerable impact on the concepts of DL design. Our findings should be of interest for librarians as well as system designers. We highlight and discuss the far-reaching implications for the design of, and interaction with, libraries. This paper discusses the lessons learned from building such a distributed alerting service. We present our prototype implementation as a proof-of-concept for an alerting service for open DL software.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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S. Bittner and A. Hinze. Classification and analysis of distributed event filtering algorithms. In Proceedings of the OTM: CoopIS, DOA, and ODBASE 2004.
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G. Buchanan and A. Hinze. A Distributed Directory Service for Greenstone. Technical Report 01/2005, CS Department, University of Waikato, New Zealand, January 2005.
 
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A. Carzaniga. Architectures for an Event Notification Service Scalable to Wide-area Networks PhDthesis, Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy, December 1998.
 
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F. Fabret, F. Llirbat, J. Pereira, and D. Shasha. Efficient matching for content-based publish/subscribe systems. Technical report, INRIA, 2000. http://wwwcaravel.inria.fr/pereira/matching.ps.
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A. Hinze. A-MEDIAS: Concept and Design of an Adaptive Integrating Event Notification Service PhD thesis, Freie Universität Berlin, July 2003.
 
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A. Schweer. Alerting in Grenstone 3. Master 's thesis, University of Dortmund, Germany, 2005.
 
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T. W. Yan and H. García-Molina. SIFT -tool for wide-are information dissemination. In Proceedings of the Usenix 1995.

CITED BY  7

Collaborative Colleagues:
George Buchanan: colleagues
Annika Hinze: colleagues