Seminar Announcement
| Title: |
Processing for Intelligence
|
| Speaker: |
Dr Lakshmi Narasimham |
| |
Principal Research Scientist,
Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO)
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| Date: |
Wednesday 30th August, 2000 |
| Time: |
3.00pm |
| Venue: |
Seminar Room 1.24 |
Abstract
Anecdotal studies indicate that computer accessible information in the
world is currently doubling at the rate of every 180 days, but by the year
2010, information doubling will occur every 50 days. It will therefore
become impossible for humans to collect, navigate, comprehend and analyse
information manually and automated technologies will soon become the norm.
Fundamental issues in information systems include: volume, heterogeneity
(e.g., numeric, non-numeric, 2D, 3D), mode (e.g., multimodel, multimedia
and geospatial), nature (e.g., off-line, realtime, mission-critical),
language (e.g., lingua, context), and culture (e.g., meaning and use of
information and therefore their relative relevance). On the other hand,
operational issues such as, storage, management, retrieval, linking,
security, effectiveness and efficiency of use of information systems play
vital roles in the performance and quality of service provided to both
individuals and organisations. What components therefore constitute to
making information, knowledge and intelligence are therefore difficult to
fathom.
In this seminar some of the fundamental and operational issues will be
described and illustrated through few case studies where I have been
involved in terms of research, design, development and analysis. Examples
will be drawn briefly from the areas of computer architecture, performance
modelling and measurement, test data generation for large software systems,
fact extraction system, speech processing system and geospatial data
management system. In addition, issues in data fusion and their relevance
to information management will also be included, where required.
Issues in software engineering (a la OO paradigm), visualisation, pattern
engineering, interoperability and composability form the technical
foundations to total information management and exploitation for the
future. The proposed visionary statement has a strong underpinning based
on these areas, but will also allude to the moral dilemma between ethical
issues and human ambitions.
The works reported are based on CORBA and Java/C++, but other technologies
such as HLA and COM+ also have relevance and significance to information
management.
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