Topic: Scalability and Efficiency on Data Mining Applied to Internet Applications
Link:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2980110657131275963#
Google Tech Talks August 16, 2007
ABSTRACT: The Internet went well beyond a technology artefact, increasingly becoming a social interaction tool. These interactions are usually complex and hard to analyze automatically, demanding the research and development of novel data mining techniques that handle the individual characteristics of each application scenario. Notice that these data mining techniques, similarly to other machine learning techniques, are intensive in terms of both computation and I/O, motivating the development of new paradigms, programming environments, and parallel algorithms that support scalable and efficient applications. In this talk we present some results that justify not only the need for developing these new techniques, as well as their parallelization. Wagner Meira Jr. obtained his PhD from the University of Rochester in 1997 and is currently Associate Professor at the Computer Science Department at Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil. His research focuses on scalability and efficiency of large scale parallel and distributed systems, from massively parallel to Internet-based platforms, and on data mining algorithms, their parallelization, and application to areas such as information retrieval, bioinformatics, and e-governance
Tags: Training