Gerard Salton | |
Birth Name: | Gerhard Anton Sahlmann |
Birth Date: | 8 March 1927 |
Birth Place: | Nuremberg, Germany |
Death Place: | Ithaca, New York, US |
Fields: | information retrieval |
Workplaces: | Cornell University |
Education: | Brooklyn College Harvard University |
Thesis Title: | An automatic data processing system for public utility revenue accounting |
Thesis Url: | http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=%7Clibrary/m/aleph%7C003918090 |
Thesis Year: | 1958 |
Doctoral Advisor: | Howard Aiken |
Doctoral Students: | |
Known For: | the father of Information Retrieval Gerard Salton Award |
Gerard A. "Gerry" Salton (8 March 1927 – 28 August 1995) was a professor of Computer Science at Cornell University. Salton was perhaps the leading computer scientist working in the field of information retrieval during his time, and "the father of Information Retrieval".[2] His group at Cornell developed the SMART Information Retrieval System, which he initiated when he was at Harvard. It was the very first system to use the now popular vector space model for information retrieval.
Salton was born Gerhard Anton Sahlmann on in Nuremberg, Germany. He came to the United States in 1947 and was naturalized in 1952. He received a Bachelor's (1950) and Master's (1952) degree in mathematics from Brooklyn College, and a Ph.D. from Harvard in applied mathematics in 1958, the last of Howard Aiken's doctoral students, and taught there until 1965, when he joined Cornell University and co-founded its department of Computer Science.
Salton was perhaps most well known for developing the now widely used vector space model for Information Retrieval.[3] In this model, both documents and queries are represented as vectors of term counts, and the similarity between a document and a query is given by the cosine between the term vector and the document vector. In this paper, he also introduced TF-IDF, or term-frequency-inverse-document frequency, a model in which the score of a term in a document is the ratio of the number of terms in that document divided by the frequency of the number of documents in which that term occurs. (The concept of inverse document frequency, a measure of specificity, had been introduced in 1972 by Karen Sparck-Jones.[4]) Later in life, he became interested in automatic text summarization and analysis,[5] as well as automatic hypertext generation.[6] He published over 150 research articles and 5 books during his life.
Salton was editor-in-chief of the Communications of the ACM and the Journal of the ACM, and chaired Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval (SIGIR). He was an associate editor of the ACM Transactions on Information Systems. He was an ACM Fellow (elected 1995),[7] received the Award of Merit from the American Society for Information Science (1989), and was the first recipient of the SIGIR Award for outstanding contributions to study of Information Retrieval (1983) -- now called the Gerard Salton Award.