[Asis-l] Information Retrieval and Youth: The Question of Relevance and Readability on the Web - Presentation by Dr. Dania Bilal

Rebecca Hall rjhall at uwm.edu
Mon Apr 8 18:24:37 EDT 2013







UW-Milwaukee , iSchool 
Research Grou p for Information Retrieval (R GIR) Presentation 

Information Retrieval and Youth: The Question of Relevance and Readability on the Web 
( poster.pdf ) 


Dr. Dania Bilal 
Professor School Information Sciences, 
College of Communication and Information, 
The University of Tennessee at Knoxville 




Monday, April 15, 2013 
1:00 - 2:30 
This event will be recorded and available online after the presentation . 
Please visit the RGIR website for a link to the vid eo: http://research.sois.uwm.edu/rgir/ 





UW-Milwauke, iSchool 
NWQB 3511 
2025 E Newport Ave 
Milwaukee, WI 53211 




Abstract: 


Much research to advance relevance of information retrieval (IR) from Web search engines has been conducted in recent years. Similarly, studies on the readability of web pages have significantly increased since 2010. Some researchers have explored the reading difficulty of websites, complexity of reading texts online, and impact of interface usability issues on reading; while others have developed new algorithms and models to improve relevance based on the reading difficulty of websites, or to predict topic distribution based on readability level. Yet, we are still facing challenges and issues in meeting the information needs of youth, notably children, who have developed an affinity for leading engines (i.e., Google, Yahoo!, and Bing). Bilal’s recent study (2012) reveals that out of 1,360 children’s search queries submitted to these engines, 655 results were relevant, producing a precision ratio of 48%. The difficulty children experience in interpreting results retrieved by search engines is another dilemma. Could the reading complexity of these results be at the crux of this difficulty? 

Exploration of the relevancy and precision of results retrieved by search engines on children’s search queries, design of innovative methodologies for assessing relevance, and use of “standard” readability measures to evaluate the reading level of retrieved information vis-à-vis children’s reading abilities should unveil critical areas that demand the attention and intervention of researchers, educators, practitioners, and interface designers. Effective system and human interventions should improve IR performance as well as optimize the search experiences and learning outcomes of youth across all age groups. 


Bio: 
Dr. Dania Bilal is a Professor at the School Information Sciences, College of Communication and Information, The University of Tennessee at Knoxville. She teaches courses in information access and retrieval, human-computer interaction, Web mining, information systems design and implementation, and research methods. She publishes research on information behavior with a focus on children’s interaction with digital interfaces (search engines and digital libraries); retrieval performance of search engines, usability, and interface design for children. She has published in top tier peer-reviewed scholarly journals including the Journal of the American Society for Information Science (JASIS&T) and Technology and Information Processing & Management (IPM). 



Rebecca Hall 
Web Development & Marketing Coordinator 
Instructor 
UW-Milwaukee, School of Information Studies 
PO Box 413, Milwaukee, WI 53201 
Ph: 414.229.2855 | F: 414.229.6699 
http://www.uwm.edu/sois 

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