Distinguished Scientist at Microsoft and Deputy Managing Director of the Microsoft Research Lab in Redmond
Abstract: Traditionally, search engines have returned the same results to everyone who issues the same query. However, using a single ranking for everyone in every context at every point in time limits how well a search engine can do in providing relevant information.
In this talk I outline a framework to quantify the "potential for personalization,” which we use to characterize the extent to which different people have different intents for a query. I describe several examples of how we represent and use different kinds of contextual features to improve search quality for individuals. I conclude by highlighting important challenges in developing personalized systems at web scale, including control and transparency, serendipity, and evaluation.
Biography: Susan Dumais a Distinguished Scientist at Microsoft and Deputy Managing Director of the Microsoft Research Lab in Redmond. Prior to joining Microsoft Research, she was at Bell Labs and Bellcore, where she worked on Latent Semantic Analysis, techniques for combining search and navigation, and organizational impacts of new technology. Her current research focuses on user modelling and personalization, context and search and temporal dynamics of information.
Susan has worked closely with several Microsoft groups (Bing, Windows Desktop Search, SharePoint, and Office Online Help) on search-related innovations. She has published widely in the fields of information science, human-computer interaction and cognitive science, and holds several patents on novel retrieval algorithms and interfaces. Susan is also an adjunct professor in the Information School at the University of Washington. She is Past-Chair of ACM's Special Interest Group in Information Retrieval (SIGIR), and serves on several editorial boards, technical program committees, and government panels. She was elected to the CHI Academy in 2005, an ACM Fellow in 2006, received the SIGIR Gerard Salton Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2009, was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2011, received the ACM Athena Lecturer and Tony Kent Strix Awards in 2014, and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2015.