Stephen Robertson (computer scientist)

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Stephen Robertson
Born (1946-04-06) 6 April 1946 (age 75)
NationalityBritish
Alma materCambridge, City University, University College London
Known forWork on information retrieval and inverse document frequency
AwardsGerard Salton Award (2000), Tony Kent Strix award (1998), ACM Fellow (2013)
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
Doctoral advisorB.C (Bertie) Brookes
Websitestaff.city.ac.uk/~sbrp622

Stephen Robertson is a British computer scientist. He is known for his work on information retrieval[1] and the Okapi BM25 weighting model.[2][3]

After completing his undergraduate degree in mathematics at Cambridge University, he took an MS at City University, and then worked for ASLIB. He then studied for his PhD at University College London under the renowned statistician and scholar B. C. Brookes. He then returned to City University working there from 1978 until 1998 in the Department of Information Science, continuing as a part-time professor and subsequently as professor emeritus. He is also a fellow of Girton College, Cambridge University. Now retired, Robertson is Professor Emeritus at City University, and a Visiting Professor in the Department of Computer Science at UCL.[4] The Stephen Robertson prize for the best dissertation in the UCL MA/MSc in Digital Humanities is named after him.[4] He also writes poetry, and has written a book about the origins of information technology (see below).

From 1998 to 2013 he worked in the Cambridge laboratory of Microsoft Research, where he led a group investigating core search processes such as term weighting, document scoring and ranking algorithms, combining evidence from different sources, and metrics and methods for the evaluation and optimisation of search. Much of his work has contributed to the Microsoft search engine Bing. He participated a number of times in the TREC conference.

References[]

  1. ^ Robertson, S. E.; Spärck Jones, K. (1976). "Relevance weighting of search terms". Journal of the American Society for Information Science. 27 (3): 129. doi:10.1002/asi.4630270302.
  2. ^ Spärck Jones, K.; Walker, S.; Robertson, S. E. (2000). "A probabilistic model of information retrieval: Development and comparative experiments: Part 1". Information Processing & Management. 36 (6): 779–808. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.134.6108. doi:10.1016/S0306-4573(00)00015-7.
  3. ^ Spärck Jones, K.; Walker, S.; Robertson, S. E. (2000). "A probabilistic model of information retrieval: Development and comparative experiments: Part 2". Information Processing & Management. 36 (6): 809–840. doi:10.1016/S0306-4573(00)00016-9.
  4. ^ a b "The Stephen Robertson Prize | UCL UCL Centre for Digital Humanities".

External links[]

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