Computer system that tries to automatically gather, translate, organize, and present information
MiTAP, or Mitre Text and Audio Processing, is a computer system that tries to automatically gather, translate, organize, and present information "for monitoring infectious disease outbreaks and other global events."[1] It is also used in the FBI Investigative Data Warehouse.
Sources
"Multiple information sources in multiple languages are automatically captured, filtered, translated, summarized, and categorized"[1]
It uses 'web sources, electronic mailing lists, newsgroups, news feeds, and audio-video data.'. The audio-video is automatically transcribed into text by the ViTAP system.[1]
Guts
In 2002 it was reported to have used CyberTrans, the Alembic natural language analyzer, WebSumm summarizer, Lucene indexing, NewsBlaster from Columbia, Brill tagging, SOAP, HTML, NNTP, Perl, Unix scripts, and other tools. Upgrades to various components are planned.[2]
Creators
It was created at the Mitre Corporation by Damianos and a team of other researchers, with public release in 2001.[1][3]
Damianos, Laurie, and Jay Ponte, Steve Wohlever, Florence Reeder, David Day, George Wilson and Lynette Hirschman (2002). "MiTAP, Text and Audio Processing for Bio-Security: A Case Study"(PDF). AAAI-02 Proceedings. American Association for Artificial Intelligence. Retrieved 2009-03-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)