by Martin White | May 11, 2022 | AI Governance, Digital workplace, Information Management, Research, Search
In order to be awarded my chemistry degree in 1970 I had to pass a reading comprehension examination in German. This was because at that time the Beilstein and Gmelin handbooks on organic and inorganic chemistry were primarily published in German, as was Angewandte...
by Martin White | May 5, 2022 | AI Governance, Information Management, Research, Search
The message coming from the enterprise search vendors at present is that AI (usually vaguely defined) can solve all search problems and present a very high percentage of relevant items on the first page of results. This ‘machine’ ranking of relevance is determined by...
by Martin White | Apr 27, 2022 | AI Governance, Information Management, Search
In any organisation there are multiple invisible silos. These silos are based on access permissions and the reason they are invisible is because the user has no means of knowing that they are not seeing the entire enterprise-wide corpus of information. A feature of...
by Martin White | Feb 24, 2022 | AI Governance, Digital workplace, Search
Over the last few years there has been a very significant increase in the attention being paid to explainable AI, partly as an outcome of new regulations that have been proposed by the European Union. One of the earliest papers (2017) on the topic was authored by...
by Martin White | Dec 6, 2021 | AI Governance, Search
Every enterprise search software vendor promotes the value of personalization, based on some mix of signals from previous clicked results and context information from what it assumes is your role and expertise. This is all neatly wrapped up in a Black Box labelled AI...
by Martin White | Oct 25, 2021 | AI Governance, Digital workplace, Information Management
Putting aside the scale of research and development of AI technology there is probably no more important topic at present than Explainable AI, usually given the acronym XAI or xAI. The topic has crept into existence over the last five years but the launch of the IBM...
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