February 5, 2003
Conference Paper

Finding Text Information in the Ocean of Electronic Documents

Abstract

Information management in natural resources has become an overwhelming task. A massive amount of electronic documents and data is now available for creating informed decisions. The problem is finding the relevant information to support the decision-making process. Determining gaps in knowledge in order to propose new studies or to determine which proposals to fund for maximum potential is a time-consuming and difficult task. Additionally, available data stores are increasing in complexity; they now may include not only text and numerical data, but also images, sounds, and video recordings. Information visualization specialists at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) have software tools for exploring electronic data stores and for discovering and exploiting relationships within data sets. These provide capabilities for unstructured text explorations, the use of data signatures (a compact format for the essence of a set of scientific data) for visualization (Wong et al 2000), visualizations for multiple query results (Havre et al. 2001), and others (http://www.pnl.gov/infoviz ). We will focus on IN-SPIRE, a MS Windows vision of PNNL’s SPIRE (Spatial Paradigm for Information Retrieval and Exploration). IN-SPIRE was developed to assist information analysts find and discover information in huge masses of text documents.

Revised: June 26, 2007 | Published: February 5, 2003

Citation

Medvick P.A., and A.J. Calapristi. 2003. Finding Text Information in the Ocean of Electronic Documents. In Natural Resources Information Management Forum (2003 : Richmond, B.C.): Putting Knowledge to Work. FORREX Series 8, edited by Trina Innes, 211-215. Kamloops, :FORREX–Forest Research Extension Partnership. PNNL-SA-38011.