[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Eigen-Value Indexing in Second Order Systems
On 9/29/06, Len Bullard <cbullard@h...> wrote: > First, take a look at this article and take note of the 'network effect' and > 'locking'. > > http://www.ft.com/cms/s/cd46a446-4edf-11db-b600-0000779e2340.html ok. > To understand locking, it helps if you understand second order systems. > Locking is an effect of the selectors feeding back to the index of scalars. > You think of that as a 'democratic decision' and in a naïve way, it is and > that is why there are few if any democratic governments but lots of > republics. It helps if you understand why that is the case but it won't > sit well with anyone who thinks a flat democracy is a good form of > government. You are probably trolling so I don't expect you to give a good > answer no, but I was teasing a bit earlier. Said teasing based on Andrew Welch's statement that you were somewhat hard to understand. Which I often find to be the case as well. Communication and understanding of such is based on shared references and a concept of how those references relate to the subject at hand. That you are doing a lot of references to eigen related concepts in the context of search is outside of my frame of reference because I am most used to these concepts (in computing) having to do with pictorial transformations for example. I suppose that there is at lower levels of search engine work a use for these concepts because of graph and matrix manipulations but I haven't ever given a thought to it, and so I have a hard time mapping the higher level concepts of search that we are all familiar with to the lower level concepts. That said I often feel uncomfortable in trying to define vague concepts of human interaction, such as democratic processes via mathematical model. I think there is a gap between the model and the actuality the extent of which cannot be measured, something like the inductive gap, only much more problematic in being less defined and understood. >, but actually, once the selections are made, what you have are > derivative results, so you don't end up with a democracy anyway. You end up > with the choices of the choosers of the choices increasing in value and > producing the so-called 'long tail' power law. It doesn't necessarily > produce sales of low volume ideas. It can effectively extinguish them. > > http://blogs.zdnet.com/Ratcliffe/?p=171 Do you actually mean sales in this case, or do you mean the more general transmission. I suppose I would mean transmission if I were making the same case. And this might make it difficult to understand because the sale of an idea is its transmission in a somewhat metaphorical use of the word sale. > > If someone is basing their evaluation on an eigen-value index, they are not > going to see new ideas, products, and particularly, language. This is a > model based on previous selections, not a topical model (see topical vector > model) so, you have to be willing to go deep into the search returns to find > weak signals (the edge of the network in that model and in a topical vector > index, the outliers. If you don't you won't understand or even recognize > emergent events. well everyone bases their evaluations on previous selections, for most these previous selections are their life and readings. A solution seems to be to also feed randomness into the selection pool. > > >Indirectly you are indicating that Google's not pointing at enough > >resources for "false eigen-index locking" suggests that their index is > >inadequate to an expert's requirements in a particular subject matter? > > That depends on the user and the subject matter. What it does mean is that > simply slicing off the top Google returns is a weak assertion of authority > for any decision. True, but that was not was what was done. He provided the total of the returns which was three. This does not give a pretty strong argument for the esoteric nature of the concept that you were discussing, and in a general discussion it might be considered something requiring further explanation. I might have any number of splendid points to make by referencing the Y Gododdin in an argument, but I would probably keep from doing so if I did not expect that those I talked with knew of it (which I would not expect), or at least provide some explanation of the reference and the background of the poem. > >Do you mean: A reference to the point above - because of the massive > >scale of Google's index can be gamed by sending in more information. > >That it needs to be filtered to make sure there is no gaming? > > Essentially yes, but really, by careful or naive construction of the > information sent, and by ignoring those parts of the information returned > that are inconvenient to the claims. That is why patent review narrows > claims while patent submission attempts to expand them. This is a game in > and of itself but the game has clarity and is evolutionarily stable UNLESS > the domain in which the claims are made is itself murky. Can you think of any artificially constructed games that mimic the patent review process. This is just a question of interest. I cannot think of any but I only know a good dozen games, some voting games. I guess it could be argued that Games and eigensystems are related, although hadn't ever thought of that either. > >Do you mean: Google Scholar, Froogle and other specialized access > >points to the Google Index attempt to combat the above named problem? > > Yes. Although the problem is if all they are indexing is URI-resources, > they are missing a large portion of the prior art. I suspect that is why > scanning and publishing is a big part of their plan. Well for the specialized access represented by Google Scholar yes. I think for Froogle, or whatever the new version of that is they will want to somehow include Google Base or other solutions for companies to upload catalogs. Cheers, Bryan Rasmussen [Date Prev] | [Thread Prev] | [Thread Next] | [Date Next] -- [Date Index] | [Thread Index] |
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