scispace - formally typeset
A

Andrew S. Gordon

Researcher at University of Southern California

Publications -  123
Citations -  2333

Andrew S. Gordon is an academic researcher from University of Southern California. The author has contributed to research in topics: Commonsense reasoning & Commonsense knowledge. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 123 publications receiving 1945 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew S. Gordon include University of Koblenz and Landau & Lingnan University.

Papers
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI

PhotoFall: discovering weblog stories through photographs

TL;DR: A new story search tool is described, PhotoFall, which allows users to quickly find stories related to their topic of interest by judging the relevance of the photographs extracted from top search results, and the accuracy of relevance judgments made using this interface is evaluated.

Strategies in Analogous Planning Cases

TL;DR: This paper proposes that a theoretical understanding of analogical reasoning allows us to use strategies as an investigative lens to view the mental models that people have of others and of themselves, and undertook a project to systematically analyze and represent strategies on a large scale.

Story Management Technologies for Organizational Learning

TL;DR: This paper describes three areas where intelligent technologies can be applied to automate story management practices in support of organizational learning and describes how stories can be transformed into effective story-based learning environments with minimal development costs.
Book ChapterDOI

Playing Story Creation Games with Logical Abduction

TL;DR: This work demonstrates the feasibility of this approach by hand-authoring a knowledge base of axioms that is sufficient to generate eight creative narratives each related to three Tell Tale cards, depicting a baseball player, a heart, and a train.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Content-based similarity measures of weblog authors

TL;DR: It is found that commonly used text similarity measures do not correlate well with human judgments of author similarity, however, various measures that pay special attention to personal pronouns and their context correlate significantly with different facets of similarity.