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SUSIE Search using services and information extraction

ABSTRACT The API of a Web service restricts the types of queries that the service can answer. For example, a Web service might provi e a metho that returns the songs of a given singer, but it might not provi e a metho that returns the singers of a given song. If the user as!s for the singer of some specific song, then the Web service cannot be calle " even though the un erlying atabase might have the esire piece of information. This asymmetry is particularly problematic if the service is use in a Web service orchestration system. In this paper, we propose to use on#the#fly information extraction to collect values that can be use as parameter bin ings for the Web service. We show how this i ea can be integrate into a Web service orchestration system. $ur approach is fully implemente in a prototype calle %&%I'. We present experiments with real#life ata an services to emonstrate the practical viability an goo performance of our approach.

Architecture

Contact: 040-40274843, 9703109334 Email id: academicliveprojects@gmail.com, www.logicsystems.org.in

SUSIE Search using services and information extraction

Existing System: 'xisting metho s exists a con(unctive query plan over the views that is equivalent to the original query is )P#har in the si*e of the query. This rewriting strategy assumes that the views are complete +i.e., contain all the tuples in their efinition,. This assumption is unrealistic in our setting with Web services, where sources may overlap or complement each other but are usually incomplete. When sources are incomplete, one aims to fin maximal containe rewritings of the initial query, in or er to provi e the maximal number of answers to compose existing functions to compute answers, which often consumes the entire bu get before any answer is returne Proposed System: In this paper, we propose to use on#the#fly information extraction to collect values that can be use as parameter bin ings for the Web service. We show how this i ea can be integrate into a Web service orchestration system. $ur approach is fully implemente in a prototype calle %&%I'.

We propose to use Web#base information extraction +I', on the fly to etermine the right input values for the asymmetric Web services. %olutions for re ucing the number of accesses. )otions of minimal rewritings have been propose maximal results. however, the goal remains the computation of

We have propose to use information extraction to guess bin ings for the input variables an then vali ate these bin ings by the Web service. Through this approach, a whole new class of queries has become tractable.

Contact: 040-40274843, 9703109334 Email id: academicliveprojects@gmail.com, www.logicsystems.org.in

SUSIE Search using services and information extraction

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Q ER! A"S#ER$"%: -ost relate to our setting is the problem of answering queries using views with limite access patterns ./0. The approach of ./0 rewrites the initial query into a set of queries to be execute over the given views. The authors show that for a con(unctive query over a global schema an a set of views over the same schema. $"'(RMAT$(" E)TRACT$(": Information extraction +I', is concerne with extracting structure ata from ocuments. I'

metho s suffer from the inherent imprecision of the extraction process. &sually, the extracte ata is way too noisy to allow irect querying. %&%I' overcomes this limitation, by using I' solely for fin ing can i ate entities of interest an fee ing these as inputs into Web service calls. )ame 'ntity 1ecognition +)'1, approaches .23"/40 aim to etect interesting entities in text ocuments. They can be use to generate can i ates for %&%I'. The first approach iscusse in this paper matches noun phrases against the names of entities that are registere in a !nowle ge base " a simple but effective technique that circumvents the noise in learning#base )'1 techniques. #e+ ser,ices: We have shown that a consi erable number of real worl Web services allow as!ing for only one argument of a relationship, but not for the other. We have propose to use information extraction to guess bin ings for the input variables an then vali ate these bin ings by the Web service. Through this approach, a whole new class of queries has become tractable. We have shown that provi ing inverse functions alone is not enough. They also have to be prioriti*e accor ingly.

Contact: 040-40274843, 9703109334 Email id: academicliveprojects@gmail.com, www.logicsystems.org.in

SUSIE Search using services and information extraction

We have implemente our system, %&%I', an showe the vali ity of our approach on real ata sets. We believe that the beauty of our approach lies in the fruitful symbiosis of information extraction an Web services. Moti,.tion: There is a growing number of Web services that provi e a wealth of information. There are Web services about boo!s +isbn b.org, librarything. com, Ama*on, Abe5oo!s,, about movies +api.internetvi eoarchive.com,, about music +musicbrain*.org, lastfm.com,, an about a large variety of other topics. &sually, a Web service is an interface that provi es access to an encapsulate bac!#en accessing its atabase. E)TRACT$"% CA"0$0ATES: $nce the Web pages have been retrieve , it remains to extract the can i ate entities. Information extraction is a challenging en eavor, because it often requires near#human un erstan ing of the input ocuments. $ur scenario is somewhat simpler, because we are only intereste in extracting the entities of a certain type from a set of Web pages. atabase. For example, the site musicbrain*.org offers a Web service for

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Contact: 040-40274843, 9703109334 Email id: academicliveprojects@gmail.com, www.logicsystems.org.in

SUSIE Search using services and information extraction

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Contact: 040-40274843, 9703109334 Email id: academicliveprojects@gmail.com, www.logicsystems.org.in

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