• DocumentCode
    1200277
  • Title

    Industry-Academic Relationships

  • Author

    Russell, Daniel M.

  • Author_Institution
    Google
  • Volume
    42
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2009
  • fDate
    3/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    67
  • Lastpage
    68
  • Abstract
    Without question, university research has played a critical role in the exploration of ideas in indexing, crawling, and user-interface design. Industry and the academy have always worked together sometimes working well, occasionally at cross-purposes. In the area of information seeking, historically the relationship has been clear: The academic environment gave support, instruction, and a nurturing environment to the early search engines. Without academia, the search world would be quite different today. Perhaps search engines would have arrived on the technology landscape without the university, but, without question, university research has played a critical role in the exploration of ideas in indexing, crawling, and user-interface design.The academy generates and tests ideas through the vehicle of graduate students, professors, grants, and small-to-medium-scale experimentation. The industrial world scales ideas that work into fully operational systems. No one sphere of research holds a lock on novel ideas or innovation, but both mutually profit by having relationships allowing ideas and people to add to our field´s vigor.
  • Keywords
    educational institutions; search engines; user interfaces; indexing; industry-academic relationships; information seeking; innovation; search engines; university; user-interface design; Chemical industry; Cloud computing; Collaboration; Collaborative work; Computer science; History; Industrial relations; Instruments; Physics computing; Search engines; information retrieval; information-seeking support systems; search;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Computer
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9162
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MC.2009.86
  • Filename
    4803891