UFTO Note - SPIRE Visualization System Finds Data Fast - May 23, 1997
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Cleantech 704 Posts |
Subject: UFTO Note - SPIRE Visualization System Finds
Data Fast
Date: Fri, 23 May 1997
From: Ed Beardsworth <edbeards@ufto.com>
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| ** UFTO ** Edward Beardsworth ** Consultant
| 951 Lincoln Ave. tel 415-328-5670
| Palo Alto CA 94301-3041 fax 415-328-5675
| http://www.ufto.com edbeards@ufto.com
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Spatial Paradigm for Information Retrieval and Exploration
(SPIRE)
Visualization System Finds Data Fast
Some of you have seen Pacific Northwest National Lab (PNNL)
presentations about SPIRE, for example at the Electrotechnology
Conference in Tampa, April 1996. In September 1996, R&D
Magazine selected this technology as one of the 100 most
technologically Significant Products of the Year.
ThemeMedia, Inc., a new company, has recently licensed SPIRE for
commercial development.
SPIRE is a revolutionary software-based solution to a problem
facing professional and casual knowledge workers alike --
information overload. It enables users to make sense of the
mountains of text-based digital information bombarding them daily
from media sources, on-line services, and the World Wide Web.
Through proprietary text analysis, visualization and interaction
techniques, users can rapidly process textual databases and
create visual maps describing the thematic contents of thousands
of documents.
The result is information shown as 3-D images that seem familiar
to the user -- either as stars in the sky or peaks and valleys in
a landscape. By interacting with the resulting visualizations,
users can explore complex relationships between documents, themes
and topics and quickly identify documents which are critical to
their analysis.
Uses currently include such applications as intelligence
analysis, legal-case preparation and medical case analysis. The
technology works with almost any database - word processing
files, e-mail messages, patent filings, research papers, legal
transcripts, news archives, and even web sites.
ThemeMedia Inc.
8383 158th Ave N.E, 3rd Floor
Redmond, WA 98052
(425) 602-3550 info@smaby.com
(Above text adapted from http://www.smaby.com/thememedia.html)
News clip from web site:
----------------
New software manages mountains of information
Steve Alexander / Star Tribune
Picture this: You are flying over an unearthly landscape where
the mountain peaks are yellow, the valleys violet and the terrain
has labels such as "TWA crash" and "Clinton and Whitewater."
No, this is not a nightmare. The information landscape is created
by computer software from a start-up Minneapolis company called
ThemeMedia that provides a new way of organizing and looking at
computerized data.
Originally developed for federal government spies, the software,
called Spire, "visualizes" computer data as "Themescapes"
(mountains and valleys) or "Galaxies" to help people make quicker
decisions.
"Everyone is overwhelmed with information," said Gary Smaby, a
Minneapolis-based technology analyst with the Smaby Group who is
chief executive officer of ThemeMedia. "This takes the fire hose
and turns it into a soda straw you can drink from."
But there's much more to Spire than pretty pictures. The software
actually reads and sorts thousands of documents using a
proprietary "algorithm," or computer code, that scans documents
for "concepts" rather than words.
What that means is Spire sorts documents into categories without
anyone reading them first, and that's something experts say
hasn't been possible up to now.
Even today's most sophisticated computer databases require a
person to classify information before the database can use it.
That sounds good to Karen Moser, a senior analyst at the Aberdeen
Group, a Boston computer industry market research firm.
"I know of no document management vendor whose product could
automatically categorize documents without manual or human
intervention," Moser said. Current computer technology for
classifying documents is based on searching for key words, not
concepts, she said.
ThemeMedia licensed the Spire technology from the Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, Wash., which is
operated by the Battelle Memorial Institute of Columbus, Ohio,
under a contract with the Department of Energy. The laboratory
had developed the software for the U.S. intelligence community to
help it deal with worldwide information gathering.
With the collapse of the Soviet Union, which had been the focus
of U.S. intelligence-gathering operations for decades, spies
needed new ways to find information, said Gerald Work, associate
laboratory director and a member of the ThemeMedia board of
directors along with Smaby and ThemeMedia Chairman John
Rollwagen, the former chairman and chief executive officer of
Cray Research.
"Suddenly they were faced with the challenge of trying to look
all over the world and derive information about a series of
events not related to one location or one country. Therefore
their intelligence-gathering went from covert sources of their
own to open sources of literature -- news reports, scientific
journals, popular magazines and transcripts of meetings. And they
challenged us to come up with a new way of looking at research
and analysis when there was too much information to use the old
'read and discard' method."
Seeking intelligence:
In the early 1990s, Work said, U.S. intelligence agencies used
Spire to determine whether certain Middle East countries could
produce a nuclear bomb. One way to find out was to locate the
country that was supplying the nuclear technology. But by using
Spire to read thousands of publicly available scientific
documents from all over the world and sort them for related
concepts, the spies found out in 20 minutes which country was
supplying nuclear technology. As a result, they concluded that
Middle Eastern nations could indeed build a nuclear bomb, he
said.
Now that Spire is being spun off as a commercial product to
ThemeMedia, it could affect the way people do research of all
kinds, Work said.
"Imagine the impact on a medical researcher interested in
particular disease. He or she can scan all the medical literature
in the world -- not just about that disease, but about other
similar diseases or other treatments -- then see all that data in
a landscape-like view."
Smaby said that in military applications versions of the Spire
software enabled analysts with three years of experience to
evaluate information with the same types of insights as 20-year
veterans.
Spire scans documents for concepts, then assigns numerical values
to documents that reflect the "theme" of the written material.
These numerical values determine the relationships shown in the
Themescape mountain fly-over view or the alternative "Galaxies"
presentation, in which individual documents are shown as stars in
a galaxy. Future versions of the software will automatically
classify and organize audio and video clips in the same way this
one handles documents, Smaby said.
Initially ThemeMedia will offer to do Spire computer processing
for other companies, and later will license customer companies to
use the software themselves, Smaby said. Although Spire software
now runs only on high-powered Silicon Graphics or Sun
Microsystems workstations, by mid-1998 it will operate on
high-end personal computers running the Windows NT operating
system, he said. ThemeMedia also hopes to license the technology
to firms that sell databases.
Smaby's role:
Smaby said he'll be the CEO only for the start-up phase of
ThemeMedia, whose operations and seven employees are located in
Richland, Wash. As a start-up, ThemeMedia has raised about
$400,000 in private venture capital, will soon seek another
$400,000 and by summer may seek an additional $3 million, Smaby
said.
Smaby sees the initial users of Spire as "power knowledge
professionals" such as Wall Street analysts, product marketers
trying to understand trends, advertising executives and newspaper
reporters. It also might improve the ability of companies to
track news about their competitors, he said. For example, using
Spire to scan and display Internet newsgroup discussions of a
competitor's product might reveal a growing number of complaints
about the product, which would be displayed on the screen as an
expanding mountain.
But Moser said the demand for such a product is unknown. "The
proof will be in how many users actually do this rather than just
think, wow, what a great idea. The concept sounds good, but we
don't have proof of viability in the real world, and that will be
the key issue for [ThemeMedia]."
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