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・ Key West Rapids
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・ Key West Street Car Company
・ Key West Township, Coffey County, Kansas
・ Key West Tropical Forest & Botanical Garden
・ Key West, Florida
・ Key West, Iowa
・ Key West, Minnesota
・ Key West, Virginia
・ Key Western Railroad
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・ Key Witness
・ Key Witness (1947 film)
・ Key Witness (1960 film)
・ Key Witness (Book)
Key Word in Context
・ Key word signing
・ Key Words Reading Scheme
・ Key worker
・ Key works of Carolingian illumination
・ Key worm eel
・ Key Wrap
・ Key Zarrin
・ Key's in the Mailbox
・ Key, Alabama
・ Key, Iran
・ Key, West Virginia
・ Key-agreement protocol
・ Key-based routing
・ Key-independent optimality


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Key Word in Context : ウィキペディア英語版
Key Word in Context
KWIC is an acronym for Key Word In Context, the most common format for concordance lines. The term KWIC was first coined by Hans Peter Luhn.〔Manning, C. D., Schütze, H.: "Foundations of Statistical Natural Language Processing", p.35. The MIT Press, 1999〕 The system was based on a concept called ''keyword in titles'' which was first proposed for Manchester libraries in 1864 by Andrea Crestadoro.
A KWIC index is formed by sorting and aligning the words within an article title to allow each word (except the stop words) in titles to be searchable alphabetically in the index. It was a useful indexing method for technical manuals before computerized full text search became common.
For example, a search query including all of the words in the title statement of this article ("KWIC is an acronym for Key Word In Context, the most common format for concordance lines") and the Wikipedia slogan in English ("the free encyclopedia"), searched against this very webpages, might yield a KWIC index as follows. A KWIC index usually uses a wide layout to allow the display of maximum 'in context' information (not shown in the following example).
A KWIC index is a special case of a permuted index. This term refers to the fact that it indexes all cyclic permutations of the headings. Books composed of many short sections with their own descriptive headings, most notably collections of manual pages, often ended with a permuted index section, allowing the reader to easily find a section by any word from its heading. This practice, also known as KWOC (“Key Word Out of Context”), is no longer common.
==References in Literature==

''Note: The first reference does not show the KWIC index unless you pay to view the paper. The second reference does not even list the paper at all.''
* David L. Parnas uses a KWIC Index as an example on how to perform modular design in his paper (''On the Criteria To Be Used in Decomposing Systems into Modules'' ), available as an (ACM Classic Paper )
* Christopher D. Manning and Hinrich Schütze describe a KWIC index and computer concordancing in section 1.4.5 of their book ''Foundations of Statistical Natural Language Processing''

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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