In the screencast above, you add a corpus for "Boring or Awesome" and tag five pages as either Boring or Awesome. Then when applied to a Recipe, subsequent webpages are classified as either Boring or Awesome in the Matches tab based on the initial 5 classifications you made.
@schue
After the corpus is made, we would need to upload that corpus to the FilterBubbler server, right? (http://filterbubbler.org).
What kind of corpus would make for a great demo? My best guess:
Classifications that are generally agreed upon/not contentious
There can be more than two categories (ex: classifying movie webpages on IMDB by rating as G, PG, PG-13, R...)
A corpus that might have interesting side effects, like an unexpected classification of a webpage that could be good for discussion -- do you have a good example that you have come accross?
From your FilterBubbler Demo screencast: A corpus is a collection of webpages that are tagged into topical groups.
In the screencast above, you add a corpus for "Boring or Awesome" and tag five pages as either Boring or Awesome. Then when applied to a Recipe, subsequent webpages are classified as either Boring or Awesome in the Matches tab based on the initial 5 classifications you made.
@schue