Workshop A: Web-wide Indexing/Semantic Header or Cover Page
Chair: Bipin C. Desai, Brian Pinkerton
Chris Dodge
My name is Chris Dodge, and I work as a postdoc. research scientist in
the computer centre of the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and
Marine Research (AWI) in Germany. Part of my job here has been to set
up our WWW server (at http://www.awi-bremerhaven.de/), and in my role
as "Webmaster" here, I've become interested in Web indexing and
resource discovery.
Many scientists at the AWI are somewhat sceptical about the benefits
that the Web can provide for the academic community, and in some
quarters here, the take up of Web usage has been very slow. Part of the
problem is that the apparent signal to noise ratio is too low when
people try and find information relevant to their field. In an attempt
to help our scientists track down interesting information, I have
setup a database of documents related to polar, marine and global
change research, based on automatic scanning of our proxy server
cache. I am presenting a paper on this at the conference, titled:
"Web Cataloguing Through Cache Exploitation and Steps Towards
Consistency Maintenance".
One problem with any list or catalogue of Web resources is that
changes on the Web can mean that the lists/catalouges can become out
of date. Part of my work includes attempts at the creation of
mechanisms to prevent this.
My current attitude towards this work is that while it has been
reasonably successful, by itself, it does not appear to provide a very
complete list of information on the Web related to polar and marine
research. I think that maybe this cache scanning mechanism, in
combination with other searching mechanisms, would provide a more
complete database.
A further problem is in the identification of appropriate Web
documents; in the AWI database it is estimated that at least 27% of
the database entries are of no relevance to polar and marine research.