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Gareth Jones's research
interests are in the areas of natural language engineering including
information retrieval and speech recognition, and intelligent
multimedia systems. Dr. Jones's work integrates contributions
from multiple disciplines to form novel information management
technologies. Research areas in which he works include spoken
document retrieval, scanned document retrieval, cross-language
and multi-lingual information retrieval, context-aware retrieval,
and video and image retrieval.
Dr. Jones is working
within the Center for Digital Video Processing on systems for
retrieval and management of video and multimedia content. In this
work, he focuses on the indexing of video and audio data, how
this information can be used to identify interesting content,
and how users interact with multimedia content.
As well as developing
systems which integrate multiple technologies, Dr. Jones is interested
in more fundamental aspects of models for information retrieval
and management. For example, he and one of his students have developed
an effective new method for relevance feedback incorporating document
summarisation, and ongoing work is exploring the application of
natural language processing to enhance information retrieval models.
Dr. Jones's research
in multimedia is currently centred on a project with a Ph.D. student
looking at the automatic characterisation of non-linguistic audio
features for characterisation of video data. This work is seeking
to identify, for example, whether predictable patterns of audio
features characterise genres or scene types in videos.
Dr. Jones also has
an interest in areas of cognitive science relating to human-computer
interaction and affective computing. A number of his recent student
projects have examined cognitive aspects of information seeking
and issues of affect in decision-making and in human and machine
learning.
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