Records management and text analytics - a powerful marriage for ECM Thursday, March 21 10:00 Text analytics may be the best kept secret in our industry...So what is the relationship between text analytics and records management?
What is proper texting etiquette? Admittedly I am not a big text'er (is that even a word?), but occasionally I accommodate my texting colleagues and friends by texting with them
For criminal investigations and E-Discovery the search criteria may not be directly associated with the original content or use of the document or record. Full text search tools provide the solution to this dilemma
By combining Fraud Triangle Analytics with text-mining and content analytics, indication and evidence of incentive, pressure, opportunity, and rationalization, can be detected by using keywords, but also by looking for specific lexical, syntactic and semantic patterns which indicate possible fraudulent activities
With some other text around it. The issue is that the drag and drop thing doesn’t work most of the time and it has some cross browser issues
Text and content analysis differs from traditional search in that, whereas search requires a user to know what he or she is looking for, text analysis attempts to discover information in a pattern that is not known beforehand
Dear colleagues I was asked recently by a CIO 'Where does search end and text analytics begin?'...Where does search end and text analytics begin?
More and more electronically stored information (ESI) is non-text based or does not contain any searchable text components: sound recordings, video and pictures are growing exponentially in size and more and more collaborative and social network applications support (only) these information formats
Let’s compare that to a legacy ECM system or SharePoint. Full text search is the key to find ability because it works the way users expect
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OCR: The mechanical or electronic translation of scanned images of handwritten, typewritten or printed text into machine-encoded text