DBRank

International Workshop on Ranking in Databases

 

[Welcome]       [Steering Committee]      


Welcome to DBRank

The International Workshop on Ranking in Databases (DBRank) focuses on the semantics, the modeling and the implementation of ranking and ordering in database systems and applications. In recent years, there has been a great deal of interest in developing effective techniques for ad-hoc search and retrieval in relational databases, document and multimedia databases, scientific information systems, and so on. In particular, a large number of emerging applications require exploratory querying on such databases; examples include users wishing to search databases and catalogs of products such as homes, cars, cameras, restaurants, and photographs. To address the limitations of the traditional Boolean retrieval model in these emerging ad-hoc search and retrieval applications, Top-k queries and ranking query results are gaining increasing importance. In fact, in many of these applications, ranking is an integral part of the semantics, e.g., keyword search, similarity search in multimedia as well as document databases. The increasing importance of ranking is directly derived from the explosion in the volume of data handled by current applications. The sheer amount of data makes it almost impossible to process queries in the traditional compute-then-sort approach. Hence, ranking comes as a great tool for soliciting user preferences and data exploration.

DBRank aims at providing more insight into supporting ranking in database systems and it will be a great venue for the many research groups working on ranking worldwide, with a unique opportunity to share their experience in supporting ranking in various database systems, from relational to semi-structures and unstructured data; and on different levels from query formulation and preference modeling to query processing and optimization frameworks. The workshop covers (and is not limited to) the following topics:

  • Ranking relational data
  • Rank-aware query processing and optimization
  • New fundamental developments in top-k algorithms
  • Cost-models for top-k algorithms and operators
  • User preference specification and query languages
  • Ranking in Web and XML databases
  • Learning user preferences and ranking functions
  • Ranking in distributed and peer-to-peer databases
  • Ranking as a data exploration tool
  • Ranking queries in data streams and continuous monitoring systems
  • Applications of ranking and top-k retrieval from databases
  • Ranking multimedia data
  • Domain-specific ranking, e.g., in bibliographic, biological, clinical, and scientific data

Steering Committee

  • Gautam Das
    Computer Science and Engineering Department
    University of Texas at Arlington

  • Vagelis Hristidis
    School of Computing and Information Sciences
    Florida International University

  • Ihab F. Ilyas
    David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
    University of Waterloo

 

Workshops

DBRank 2008

DBRank 2009

DBRank 2010

DBRank 2011

 

 

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