Placement of multimedia blocks on zoned disks
Renu Tewari, Richard P. King, et al.
IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging 1996
The top-performing Question-Answering (QA) systems have been of two types: consistent, solid, well-established and multi-faceted systems that do well year after year, and ones that come out of nowhere employing totally innovative approaches and which out-perform almost everybody else. This article examines both types of system in depth. We establish what a "typical" QA-system looks like, and cover the commonly used approaches by the component modules. Understanding this will enable any proficient system developer to build his own QA-system. Fortunately there are many components available for free from their developers to make this a reasonable expectation for a graduate-level project. We also look at particular systems that have performed well and which employ interesting and innovative approaches.
Renu Tewari, Richard P. King, et al.
IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging 1996
N.K. Ratha, A.K. Jain, et al.
Workshop CAMP 2000
Leo Liberti, James Ostrowski
Journal of Global Optimization
Thomas R. Puzak, A. Hartstein, et al.
CF 2007