| Clairvoyance was founded as CLARITECH Corporation in
September 1992 by Dr. David A. Evans, Armar
A. Archbold, and Carnegie Mellon University
(CMU). CLARITECH's core technology was a suite of
advanced natural-language analysis tools known as
"CLARIT", developed originally under the CLARIT Project
at CMU.
Today:
Clairvoyance Corporation enters a new chapter of
technology development and licensing. The Company is
focusing its efforts on research, prototyping, and
intellectual property development, while concentration
on extending its extensive suite of technology and
charting new directions in unstructured text
management.
Clairvoyance continues to develop and configure the
most advanced technology for applications involving the
processing of the language in documents. Our work
addresses the problem of automatic organization and
analysis of information, where speed, high accuracy,
and flexibility are required. We are striving to make
our technology widely available through licensing and
partner relationships.
Clairvoyance Timeline
Through twelve years of continuous research and
development, Clairvoyance has developed a suite of
component software for unstructured text
management. Clairvoyance modules can be used
individually or in combination to solve text management
problems in a variety of disciplines and industries.
1988 - 1992: The CLARIT Project was
begun in September 1988 in the Laboratory for Computational
Linguistics at CMU under Dr. Evans' direction. The goals of the
Project, sponsored principally by Digital Equipment Corporation,
were to develop new approaches to large-scale information
management, combining perspectives from natural-language processing
(NLP), information science and artificial intelligence. The
Project extended Dr. Evans' previous work in the areas of medical
informatics, knowledge-based systems and computational
linguistics.
By the end of 1991, the CLARIT Project had developed
significant, new technology, including practical, robust automatic
indexing using linguistic units; effective combination of complex
index terms with advanced retrieval methods (such as vector-space
modeling); automated thesaurus discovery (the ability to find the
concepts that characterize a collection of documents); and a
variety of related processes for analyzing texts. At this point,
interest in CLARIT was high; several licenses for run-time versions
of CLARIT system modules were sold by CMU to North American and
European groups.
1992 - 1996: Based on the success of
the Project, the obvious demand for commercial-grade systems for
large-scale information management, and the proprietary innovations
in the CLARIT system, Dr. Evans initiated the creation of
CLARITECH. Mr. Archbold, a longtime friend of Dr. Evans, and a
former researcher on the staff of the CLARIT Project, provided the
principal seed capital for the venture. Additional contributions of
resources, including license agreements, were made by CMU.

CLARITECH's original location
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Shortly after CLARITECH's formation, several developers were
recruited to the core staff, including key members of the CMU CLARIT Project team. During this period, Dr. Evans served the
company as Chairman of the Board and Chief Scientist and led the
company's product development and marketing efforts. Early adopters
of CLARITECH software products included research institutes and
government intelligence agencies.
In 1993, the National Technology Transfer Center (NTTC), a
clearinghouse chartered to provide public access to information
about federal research and technology, engaged CLARITECH to develop
a comprehensive document and information delivery system. The
finished system encompassed text scanning, records management and
CLARIT NLP-based information retrieval over compound documents—page images coupled with OCR text representations.
Information stored in distributed (and distant) databases was
uniformly and rapidly accessed via Web browser and Windows
interfaces. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has
subsequently adopted this system to support Internet-based search
and delivery of page images of EPA reports.
In 1994, among other activities, CLARITECH undertook a project
with the Carnegie Mellon University Libraries to develop the Heinz
Electronic Library Interactive On-line System (HELIOS) to provide
electronic access to some one million congressional papers of the
late U.S. Senator John Heinz. The Senator's papers were scanned,
converted to electronic text and indexed via the CLARIT retrieval
application. The project resulted in the first content-searchable online archive with comprehensive free-text search.
Beginning also in 1994, CLARITECH began licensing its core
technology in the form of a Toolkit—a suite of software modules
designed to interoperate seamlessly to provide a wide variety of
advanced text management and text analysis functions. The functions
supported by the tools include:
- NLP (for Morphological Analysis and Phrase/Sub-Phrase
Identification)
- Automatic Document Indexing
- Information Retrieval
- Routing/Filtering of Streaming Texts
- Subject Classification
- Summarization of Documents
- Automatic Thesaurus Discovery
- Spell-Checking (Empirically Based, without a Reference
Lexicon)
- Information Extraction (Identification of Entities and
Relations)
- "Virtual Hypertext"—Automatic Linking of Content “on
the fly”
- Document & Concept Clustering
- Compound-Document Management (combining text and page
images)
A distinguishing feature of CLARIT Tools is their use of (very
fast!) NLP in virtually all text processing. The resulting deeper
analysis of content and concepts leads to unprecedented precision
and robustness.
Using such tools, CLARITECH and its customers in this period
configured a variety of custom and replicable systems. These
systems addressed many different kinds of problems, including
large-scale newsfeed summarization and routing; information
extraction and relation finding in a real-time analysis
environment; and, of course, very advanced information
retrieval.
In 1995, CLARITECH created a web-based application called
CLARITWeb, an Internet system for accessing distributed information
encompassing both text and images. Clients using CLARITWeb were
able to perform their own specialized searches with CLARIT tools
forming the core of an Internet service. An early user of CLARITWeb
was Alexus International, a human resources management firm in
Maryland. Alexus would scan thousands of resumes into databases at
a restricted-access web site and their clients would use CLARITWeb
technology to select specific individual documents from the entire
group using sophisticated criteria of their own choosing. Alexus' customers thus received direct access to large numbers of
candidates' resumes over the net, and all processing (and
information enhancement) and analysis was provided as a service, giving Alexus' customers the benefit of very advanced technology
without requiring the purchase, installation or maintenance of
software.
1996 - 2000: In the spring of 1996,
CLARITECH began considering opportunities for growth and new
marketing partnerships. In the summer of 1996, CLARITECH and
Justsystem Corporation of Tokushima, Japan, completed an agreement
under which Justsystem Incorporated, the U.S.-based holding company
of Justsystem Corporation, acquired a majority interest in
CLARITECH. As a result, CLARITECH became a member of the family of
Justsystem Group companies.

Clairvoyance's current location
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In the autumn of 1996, Dr. Evans resigned his professorship at CMU
to join CLARITECH full time as President, CEO and Chief Scientist.
Founded in 1979, Justsystem became the leading software
developer in Japan in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Justsystem's
core product, ATOK, solved the keyboard-character-to-Kanji
conversion problem and is now the premier technology for Japanese
language applications. Along with ATOK, Justsystem has developed a
wide variety of productivity software and services, including the
popular Ichitaro word-processing package, Hanako drawing program
and other products for business accounting, databases and
groupware, with sales exceeding 10 million units.
Justsystem and CLARITECH jointly developed several end-user
applications and enterprise systems, including the
Japanese-language search system, ConceptBase, which won the 1998
"Software Product of the Year" award from the Japanese Government.
ConceptBase sales are expected to equal sales of Justsystem's
desktop software within three years.
Other Justsystem/CLARITECH applications in the Japanese market
include CB Summarizer and CB Classifier. In addition, core
ConceptBase technology is incorporated in Japanese versions of
Lotus Notes and MS Exchange. New products are being developed for
enterprise and internet applications.

CLARIT Miner - Advanced Text Mining
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* Note: CLARITECH Corporation was
originally founded under the name "CLARIT Corporation". To avoid
confusion with other existing trademarks and corporation names,
the company name was changed to "CLARITECH
Corporation" in 1994. The names "CLARIT" and "CLARITECH" are
trademarks of CLARITECH Corporation.
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