Abstract

BackgroundContinuous content management of health information portals is a feature vital for its sustainability and widespread acceptance. Knowledge and experience of a domain expert is essential for content management in the health domain. The rate of generation of online health resources is exponential and thereby manual examination for relevance to a specific topic and audience is a formidable challenge for domain experts. Intelligent content discovery for effective content management is a less researched topic. An existing expert-endorsed content repository can provide the necessary leverage to automatically identify relevant resources and evaluate qualitative metrics.ObjectiveThis paper reports on the design research towards an intelligent technique for automated content discovery and ranking for health information portals. The proposed technique aims to improve efficiency of the current mostly manual process of portal content management by utilising an existing expert-endorsed content repository as a supporting base and a benchmark to evaluate the suitability of new contentMethodsA model for content management was established based on a field study of potential users. The proposed technique is integral to this content management model and executes in several phases (ie, query construction, content search, text analytics and fuzzy multi-criteria ranking). The construction of multi-dimensional search queries with input from Wordnet, the use of multi-word and single-word terms as representative semantics for text analytics and the use of fuzzy multi-criteria ranking for subjective evaluation of quality metrics are original contributions reported in this paper.ResultsThe feasibility of the proposed technique was examined with experiments conducted on an actual health information portal, the BCKOnline portal. Both intermediary and final results generated by the technique are presented in the paper and these help to establish benefits of the technique and its contribution towards effective content management.ConclusionsThe prevalence of large numbers of online health resources is a key obstacle for domain experts involved in content management of health information portals and websites. The proposed technique has proven successful at search and identification of resources and the measurement of their relevance. It can be used to support the domain expert in content management and thereby ensure the health portal is up-to-date and current.

Highlights

  • BackgroundThe Internet has become a key medium for audiences seeking health information resources [1]; an important contributor is health information portals

  • This paper reported the development of an intelligent content discovery technique that is able to address this challenge with automated discovery and ranking features

  • The technique utilizes an existing content repository as a benchmark to validate new content discovered online. It operates in 4 modules: query construction, content search, text analytics, and multi-criteria ranking

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Summary

Introduction

BackgroundThe Internet has become a key medium for audiences seeking health information resources [1]; an important contributor is health information portals. The Web content maturity model proposed by Forrester research [6] attempts to address the challenges facing an organization’s Web content It consists of 4 phases: basic, tactical, enterprise, and engagement. The proposed technique is integral to this content management model and executes in several phases (ie, query construction, content search, text analytics and fuzzy multi-criteria ranking). Results: The feasibility of the proposed technique was examined with experiments conducted on an actual health information portal, the BCKOnline portal Both intermediary and final results generated by the technique are presented in the paper and these help to establish benefits of the technique and its contribution towards effective content management. Conclusions: The prevalence of large numbers of online health resources is a key obstacle for domain experts involved in content management of health information portals and websites. It can be used to support the domain expert in content management and thereby ensure the health portal is up-to-date and current

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