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<title>Alexis Métaireau</title>
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<div id="top">
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<p class="author"><a href=".">Alexis Métaireau</a>'s thougths</p>
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<ul class="links"></ul>
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<h1>Analyse users' browsing context to build up a web recommender</h1>
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<p class="date">Published on Fri 01 April 2011</p>
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<p>No, this is not an april's fool ;)</p>
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<p>Wow, it's been a long time. My year in Oxford is going really well. I realized
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few days ago that the end of the year is approaching really quickly.
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Exams are coming in one month or such and then I'll be working full time on my dissertation topic.</p>
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<p>When I learned we'll have about 6 month to work on something, I first thought
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about doing a packaging related stuff, but finally decided to start something
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new. After all, that's the good time to learn.</p>
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<p>Since a long time, I'm being impressed by the <a class="reference external" href="http://last.fm">last.fm</a>
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recommender system. They're <em>scrobbling</em> the music I listen to since something
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like 5 years now and the recommendations they're doing are really nice and
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accurate (I discovered <strong>a lot</strong> of great artists listening to the
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"neighbour radio".) (by the way, <a class="reference external" href="http://lastfm.com/user/akounet/">here is</a>
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my lastfm account)</p>
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<p>So I decided to work on recommender systems, to better understand what is it
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about.</p>
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<p>Recommender systems are usually used to increase the sales of products
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(like Amazon.com does) which is not really what I'm looking for (The one who
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know me a bit know I'm kind of sick about all this consumerism going on).</p>
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<p>Actually, the most simple thing I thought of was the web: I'm browsing it quite
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every day and each time new content appears. I've stopped to follow <a class="reference external" href="https://bitbucket.org/bruno/aspirator/">my feed
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reader</a> because of the
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information overload, and reduced drastically the number of people I follow <a class="reference external" href="http://twitter.com/ametaireau/">on
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twitter</a>.</p>
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<p>Too much information kills the information.</p>
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<p>You shall got what will be my dissertation topic: a recommender system for
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the web. Well, such recommender systems already exists, so I will try to add contextual
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information to them: you're probably not interested by the same topics at different
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times of the day, or depending on the computer you're using. We can also
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probably make good use of the way you browse to create groups into the content
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you're browsing (or even use the great firefox4 tab group feature).</p>
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<p>There is a large part of concerns to have about user's privacy as well.</p>
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<p>Here is my proposal (copy/pasted from the one I had to do for my master)</p>
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<div class="section" id="introduction-and-rationale">
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<h2>Introduction and rationale</h2>
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<p>Nowadays, people surf the web more and more often. New web pages are created
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each day so the amount of information to retrieve is more important as the time
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passes. These users uses the web in different contexts, from finding cooking
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recipes to technical articles.</p>
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<p>A lot of people share the same interest to various topics, and the quantity of
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information is such than it's really hard to triage them efficiently without
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spending hours doing it. Firstly because of the huge quantity of information
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but also because the triage is something relative to each person. Although, this
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triage can be facilitated by fetching the browsing information of all
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particular individuals and put the in perspective.</p>
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<p>Machine learning is a branch of Artificial Intelligence (AI) which deals with how
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a program can learn from data. Recommendation systems are a particular
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application area of machine learning which is able to recommend things (links
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in our case) to the users, given a particular database containing the previous
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choices users have made.</p>
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<p>This browsing information is currently available in browsers. Even if it is not
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in a very usable format, it is possible to transform it to something useful.
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This information gold mine just wait to be used. Although, it is not as simple as
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it can seems at the first approach: It is important to take care of the context
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the user is in while browsing links. For instance, It's more likely that during
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the day, a computer scientist will browse computing related links, and that during
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the evening, he browse cooking recipes or something else.</p>
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<p>Page contents are also interesting to analyse, because that's what people
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browse and what actually contain the most interesting part of the information.
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The raw data extracted from the browsing can then be translated into
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something more useful (namely tags, type of resource, visit frequency,
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navigation context etc.)</p>
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<p>The goal of this dissertation is to create a recommender system for web links,
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including this context information.</p>
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<p>At the end of the dissertation, different pieces of software will be provided,
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from raw data collection from the browser to a recommendation system.</p>
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</div>
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<div class="section" id="background-review">
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<h2>Background Review</h2>
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<p>This dissertation is mainly about data extraction, analysis and recommendation
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systems. Two different research area can be isolated: Data preprocessing and
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Information filtering.</p>
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<p>The first step in order to make recommendations is to gather some data. The
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more data we have available, the better it is (T. Segaran, 2007). This data can
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be retrieved in various ways, one of them is to get it directly from user's
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browsers.</p>
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<div class="section" id="data-preparation-and-extraction">
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<h3>Data preparation and extraction</h3>
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<p>The data gathered from browsers is basically URLs and additional information
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about the context of the navigation. There is clearly a need to extract more
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information about the meaning of the data the user is browsing, starting by the
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content of the web pages.</p>
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<p>Because the information provided on the current Web is not meant to be read by
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machines (T. Berners Lee, 2001) there is a need of tools to extract meaning from
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web pages. The information needs to be preprocessed before stored in a machine
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readable format, allowing to make recommendations (Choochart et Al, 2004).</p>
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<p>Data preparation is composed of two steps: cleaning and structuring (
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Castellano et Al, 2007). Because raw data can contain a lot of un-needed text
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(such as menus, headers etc.) and need to be cleaned prior to be stored.
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Multiple techniques can be used here and belongs to boilerplate removal and
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full text extraction (Kohlschütter et Al, 2010).</p>
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<p>Then, structuring the information: category, type of content (news, blog, wiki)
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can be extracted from raw data. This kind of information is not clearly defined
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by HTML pages so there is a need of tools to recognise them.</p>
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<p>Some context-related information can also be inferred from each resource. It can go
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from the visit frequency to the navigation group the user was in while
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browsing. It is also possible to determine if the user "liked" a resource, and
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determine a mark for it, which can be used by information filtering a later
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step (T. Segaran, 2007).</p>
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<p>At this stage, structuring the data is required. Storing this kind of
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information in RDBMS can be a bit tedious and require complex queries to get
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back the data in an usable format. Graph databases can play a major role in the
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simplification of information storage and querying.</p>
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</div>
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<div class="section" id="information-filtering">
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<h3>Information filtering</h3>
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<p>To filter the information, three techniques can be used (Balabanovic et
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Al, 1997):</p>
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<ul class="simple">
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<li>The content-based approach states that if an user have liked something in the
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past, he is more likely to like similar things in the future. So it's about
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establishing a profile for the user and compare new items against it.</li>
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<li>The collaborative approach will rather recommend items that other similar users
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have liked. This approach consider only the relationship between users, and
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not the profile of the user we are making recommendations to.</li>
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<li>the hybrid approach, which appeared recently combine both of the previous
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approaches, giving recommendations when items score high regarding user's
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profile, or if a similar user already liked it.</li>
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</ul>
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<p>Grouping is also something to consider at this stage (G. Myatt, 2007).
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Because we are dealing with huge amount of data, it can be useful to detect group
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of data that can fit together. Data clustering is able to find such groups (T.
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Segaran, 2007).</p>
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<p>References:</p>
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<ul class="simple">
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<li>Balabanović, M., & Shoham, Y. (1997). Fab: content-based, collaborative
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recommendation. Communications of the ACM, 40(3), 66–72. ACM.
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Retrieved March 1, 2011, from <a class="reference external" href="http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=245108.245124&amp">http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=245108.245124&amp</a>;.</li>
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<li>Berners-Lee, T., Hendler, J., & Lassila, O. (2001).
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The semantic web: Scientific american. Scientific American, 284(5), 34–43.
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Retrieved November 21, 2010, from <a class="reference external" href="http://www.citeulike.org/group/222/article/1176986">http://www.citeulike.org/group/222/article/1176986</a>.</li>
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<li>Castellano, G., Fanelli, A., & Torsello, M. (2007).
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LODAP: a LOg DAta Preprocessor for mining Web browsing patterns. Proceedings of the 6th Conference on 6th WSEAS Int. Conf. on Artificial Intelligence, Knowledge Engineering and Data Bases-Volume 6 (p. 12–17). World Scientific and Engineering Academy and Society (WSEAS). Retrieved March 8, 2011, from <a class="reference external" href="http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1348485.1348488">http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1348485.1348488</a>.</li>
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<li>Kohlschutter, C., Fankhauser, P., & Nejdl, W. (2010). Boilerplate detection using shallow text features. Proceedings of the third ACM international conference on Web search and data mining (p. 441–450). ACM. Retrieved March 8, 2011, from <a class="reference external" href="http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1718542">http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1718542</a>.</li>
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<li>Myatt, G. J. (2007). Making Sense of Data: A Practical Guide to Exploratory
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Data Analysis and Data Mining.</li>
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<li>Segaran, T. (2007). Collective Intelligence.</li>
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</ul>
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</div>
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</div>
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<div class="section" id="privacy">
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<h2>Privacy</h2>
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<p>The first thing that's come to people minds when it comes to process their
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browsing data is privacy. People don't want to be stalked. That's perfectly
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right, and I don't either.</p>
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<p>But such a system don't have to deal with people identities. It's completely
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possible to process completely anonymous data, and that's probably what I'm
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gonna do.</p>
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<p>By the way, if you have interesting thoughts about that, if you do know
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projects that do seems related, fire the comments !</p>
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</div>
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<div class="section" id="what-s-the-plan">
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<h2>What's the plan ?</h2>
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<p>There is a lot of different things to explore, especially because I'm
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a complete novice in that field.</p>
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<ul class="simple">
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<li>I want to develop a firefox plugin, to extract the browsing informations (
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still, I need to know exactly which kind of informations to retrieve). The
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idea is to provide some <em>raw</em> browsing data, and then to transform it and to
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store it in the better possible way.</li>
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<li>Analyse how to store the informations in a graph database. What can be the
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different methods to store this data and to visualize the relationship
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between different pieces of data? How can I define the different contexts,
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and add those informations in the db?</li>
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<li>Process the data using well known recommendation algorithms. Compare the
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results and criticize their value.</li>
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</ul>
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<p>There is plenty of stuff I want to try during this experimentation:</p>
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<ul class="simple">
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<li>I want to try using Geshi to visualize the connexion between the links,
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and the contexts</li>
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<li>Try using graph databases such as Neo4j</li>
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<li>Having a deeper look at tools such as scikit.learn (a machine learning
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toolkit in python)</li>
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<li>Analyse web pages in order to categorize them. Processing their
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contents as well, to do some keyword based classification will be done.</li>
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</ul>
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<p>Lot of work on its way, yay !</p>
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</div>
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<h2>Comments</h2>
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