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Is Noesis Noetic and Why Does this Matter?

Is Noesis Noetic and Why Does this Matter?. Anthony F. Beavers, Ph.D. Philosophy / Cognitive Science The University of Evansville. What is Noesis?. An “intentional” act of consciousness that is correlated with an object A limited area search engine dedicated to the discipline of philosophy

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Is Noesis Noetic and Why Does this Matter?

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  1. Is Noesis Noetic and Why Does this Matter? Anthony F. Beavers, Ph.D. Philosophy / Cognitive Science The University of Evansville

  2. What is Noesis? • An “intentional” act of consciousness that is correlated with an object • A limited area search engine dedicated to the discipline of philosophy • An encyclopedic library of reliable philosophical research designed according to the affordances of the Internet

  3. What is Noesis? • An “intentional” act of consciousness that is correlated with an object • A limited area search engine dedicated to the discipline of philosophy • An encyclopedic library of reliable philosophical research designed according to the affordances of the Internet

  4. … designed according to the affordances of the Internet • Organic (regarding both topical scope and number of documents) • Hypertextually related or relatable • Decentralized (regarding both data management and data storage) • Freely accessible

  5. Interesting Problems • Emergent organization and quality control • Automatic and intelligent search space design for context-sensitive searching • Interactive visual interface construction to navigate large information stores • Ethical prioritization of information to respect the topical needs of the user and the politics of the profession

  6. Interesting Problems • Emergent organization and quality control • Automatic and intelligent search space design for context-sensitive searching • Interactive visual interface construction to navigate large information stores • Ethical prioritization of information to respect the topical needs of the user and the politics of the profession

  7. User Agendas • Random Exploration (Why the Bear Went Over the Mountain) • ‘Ordered Bookshelf’ Browsing • Encyclopedic Discovery • Programmatic Research Discovery • Particular Resource Location

  8. Some Solutions • Limited Area Searching • Dynamic Classification with an Organic Formal Taxonomy • Document Comparison with a Recursive Artificial Network

  9. Limited Area Searching • Targets quality control issue and other issues connected to relevance • Two-pronged approach divides task into 1) where to search and 2) what to search for • Three models • Argos/Hippias – 1996 / 1997 • Noesis 2.0 and earlier – 1998 • Noesis 4.0 – 2006

  10. The Argos/Hippias Model • First ‘peer-reviewed’ search engine online • Used a set of ‘associate sites’ to determine search space • Searched the associate sites and everything to which they linked (more)

  11. The Argos/Hippias Model • Handed editorial control of content over to the editors of the associate sites • Provided backbone for EAWC context- sensitive searching

  12. The Noesis 2.0 Model • Based on Plato SE prototype • Database driven and hand-catalogued • Editorial control managed by a team of content editors who manually checked author credentials • Topic tree formation developed by professional editors (dismal failure with important lessons)

  13. The Noesis 4.0 Model • Search space based on mapping the profession of philosophy online • Regions include associations, departments, faculty webspace, online journals and reference works (more)

  14. The Noesis 4.0 Model • “By indexing regions, in effect, directories and subdirectories, rather than their contents, Noesis passes editorial control of its search space over to the individuals who, in managing their own web resources, add to, edit, and delete from the content searchable by Noesis…. The result is that the shape and texture of Noesis's search space is determined organically by credentialed scholars whose actions directly determine content.”

  15. Dynamic Classification • The Indiana Philosophy Ontology Project (InPhO) • Targets the organizational issue by providing an emergent topic tree based on an analysis of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy • Artificial intelligence-based with feedback from human users

  16. Automated Search Space Design • Based on a comparison of semantic features using a recursive artificial network • Still awaiting testing on large samples • Will provide targeted context-sensitive hypertexuality • Will enable encyclopedic discovery by potentially linking every document in Noesis’ search space to every other relevant document

  17. Partial Bibliography Beavers, A. F. 1999. Noesis: Philosophical research on-line: An experiment in progress. Newsletter on Philosophy and Computers. Beavers, A. F. 1998. Evaluating search engine models for scholarly purposes: A report from the Internet Applications Laboratory. D-Lib Magazine. Niepert, M., Buckner, C., and Allen, C. 2007 A dynamic ontology for adynamic reference work. In Rasmussen, E. M., ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries, JCDL 2007, Vancouver, BC, Canada, June 18-23, 2007, Proceedings, 288-297. Suber, P. 2002. Noesis: Is it a library with built-In searching or a search engine with a built-in library? Campus Technology.

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