GVU Technical Report Number:
GIT-GVU-94-35
Title:
Predicting Document Access in Large, Multimedia Repositories
Authors:
Mimi M. Recker
James Pitkow
Abstract:
Network-accessible multimedia databases, repositories, and libraries are
proliferating at a rapid rate. A crucial problem for these repositories
remains timely and appropriate document access. In this paper, we borrow
a model from psychological research on human memory, which has long studied
retrieval of memory items based on frequency and recency rates of past
item occurrences. Specifically, the model uses frequency and recency
rates of prior document accesses to predict future document requests.
The model is illustrated by analyzing the log file of document accesses
to the Georgia Institute of Technology World-Wide Web (WWW) database, a
large multimedia repository exhibiting high access rates. Results show
that the model predicts document access rates with a reliable degree of
accuracy. We describe extensions to the basic approach that combine the
recency and frequency analyses, and incorporate repository structure and
document type. These results have implications for the formulation of
descriptive user models of information access in large repositories. In
addition, we sketch applications in the areas of design of information
systems and interfaces, and their document caching algorithms.
Keywords:
Multimedia, repositories, psychological research, frequency and recency
rates, design
You can access this technical report via:
Part I:
PDF
Postscript
Part II:
PDF
Postscript
 
|