1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 1 Overview of Information Discovery.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
LHE 3252 Teaching the Language of Poetry Week 2 Matthew Arnold ( )
Advertisements

SLIDE 1IS 257 – Fall 2007 Codes and Rules for Description: History 2 University of California, Berkeley School of Information IS 245: Organization.
1 CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval Lecture 19 Metadata 1.
1 CS 502: Computing Methods for Digital Libraries Lecture 12 Information Retrieval II.
William Y. Arms Corporation for National Research Initiatives March 22, 1999 Object models, overlay journals, and virtual collections.
CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval
CS 501: Software Engineering Fall 2000 Lecture 1 Introduction to Software Engineering.
1 CS 502: Computing Methods for Digital Libraries Lecture 13 Descriptive Metadata I: cataloguing, classification, authority files.
1 CS 502: Computing Methods for Digital Libraries Lecture 17 Descriptive Metadata: Dublin Core.
1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 2 Introduction to Text Based Information Retrieval.
CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval
1 CS 502: Computing Methods for Digital Libraries Lecture 11 Information Retrieval I.
An introduction to databases In this module, you will learn: What exactly a database is How a database differs from an internet search engine How to find.
Allyn & Bacon 2003 Social Work Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches Topic 12: Reviewing Literature and Report Writing.
CRAI Library Catalogue of University of Barcelona.
1 DATABASES By: Hanna Ben-Or Phone: October 2011.
Chapter 7 Web Content Mining Xxxxxx. Introduction Web-content mining techniques are used to discover useful information from content on the web – textual.
1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 14 Automatic Extraction of Metadata.
Lecture Four: Steps 3 and 4 INST 250/4.  Does one look for facts, or opinions, or both when conducting a literature search?  What is the difference.
1 CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval Lecture 2 Text Based Information Retrieval.
1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 16 Thesaurus Construction.
Information Retrieval and Web Search Lecture 1. Course overview Instructor: Rada Mihalcea Class web page:
Thanks to Bill Arms, Marti Hearst Documents. Last time Size of information –Continues to grow IR an old field, goes back to the ‘40s IR iterative process.
1 Information Retrieval Acknowledgements: Dr Mounia Lalmas (QMW) Dr Joemon Jose (Glasgow)
1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 26 Automated Information Retrieval.
1 CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval Lecture 14 Metadata 1.
By Matthew Arnold. The sea is calm tonight. The tide is full, the moon lies fair Upon the straits; on the French coast the light Gleams and is gone; the.
1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 1 Overview of Information Discovery.
Intellectual Works and their Manifestations Representation of Information Objects IR Systems & Information objects Spring January, 2006 Bharat.
Of 33 lecture 1: introduction. of 33 the semantic web vision today’s web (1) web content – for human consumption (no structural information) people search.
Information Retrieval and Web Search Course overview Instructor: Rada Mihalcea.
Information Retrieval
1 CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval Lecture 8 Evaluation of Retrieval Effectiveness 1.
1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 18 Web Search Engines: Google.
Hailee Carpenter & Jessica Burnett
1 CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval Lecture 3 Searching Full Text 3.
1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 1 Overview of Information Discovery.
Subject Description LIS 571 The Organization and Control of Recorded Information.
1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 8 Collection-Level Metadata Vector Methods.
CS 501: Software Engineering Fall 199 Lecture 1 a) Administration b) Introduction to Software Engineering.
Tutorial of Online Databases Gates Memorial Library.
Dramatic Monologue Ms. Campbell. What is a Dramatic Monologue? O A single person (NOT the poet) who utters the “speech” that makes up the whole poem O.
Chapter 20 Asking Questions, Finding Sources. Characteristics of a Good Research Paper Poses an interesting question and significant problem Responds.
Definition, purposes/functions, elements of IR systems Lesson 1.
1 CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval Lecture 10 Evaluation of Retrieval Effectiveness 1.
1 CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval Lecture 1 Overview of Information Retrieval.
1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 28 (a) Two Examples of Cluster Analysis (b) Conclusion.
Some basic concepts Week 1 Lecture notes INF 384C: Organizing Information Spring 2016 Karen Wickett UT School of Information.
1 Midterm Examination. 2 General Observations Examination was too long! Most people submitted by .
CRAI Library Catalog of University of Barcelona
Automated Information Retrieval
A few poetry terms to know…
Text Based Information Retrieval
By Matthew Arnold Instructor: Laurie Jui-hua Tseng
Using computers to search electronic databases
CS 430: Information Discovery
Searching for and Accessing Information
Thanks to Bill Arms, Marti Hearst
Overview of Information Retrieval
CS 430: Information Discovery
CS 430: Information Discovery
Data Mining Chapter 6 Search Engines
DATABASES By: Hanna Ben-Or Phone:
English compulsory B.A.I
Dover Beach Imagery and Rhetorical Devices in by Matthew Arnold
Accessing Engineering Information
Introduction to Information Retrieval
Dover Beach Matthew Arnold.
Information Retrieval and Web Design
Dover Beach By Matthew Arnold
Presentation transcript:

1 CS 430: Information Discovery Lecture 1 Overview of Information Discovery

2 Course Administration Web site: Instructor: William Arms, Upson 5159 Teaching assistants: Assistant: Rosemary Adessa, Upson 5147 Sign-up sheet: Include your NetID

3 Course Administration Text book. William B. Frakes and Ricardo Baeza-Yates, Information Retrieval Data Structures and Algorithms. Prentice Hall, 1992

4 Discussion Classes Format of Wednesday evening classes: Topic announced on web site with chapter or article to read Allow several hours to prepare for class by reading the materials Class has discussion format One third of grade is class participation Class time is 7:30 to 8:30

5 Code of Conduct Computing is a collaborative activity. You are encouraged to work together, but... Some tasks may require individual work. Always give credit to your sources and collaborators. To make use of the expertise of others and to build on previous work, with proper attribution is good professional practice. To use the efforts of others without attribution is unethical and academic cheating.

6 Information Discovery People have many reasons to look for information: Known item Where will I find the wording of the US Copyright Act? Facts What is the capital of Barbados? Introduction or overview How do diesel engines work? Related information Is there a review of this article? Comprehensive search What is known of the effects of global warming on hurricanes?

7 Definitions Information retrieval: subfield of computer science that deals with automated retrieval of documents. Searching: seeking for specific information within a body of information. The result of a search is a set of hits. Browsing: unstructured exploration of a body of information. Linking: Moving from one item to another following links, such as citations, references, etc.

8 Types of Information Discovery media type textimage, video, audio, etc. searchingbrowsing linking statistical user-in-loop catalogs, indexes (metadata) CS 502 natural language processing CS 474

9 Classical Information Retrieval media type textimage, video, audio, etc. searchingbrowsing linking statistical user-in-loop catalogs, indexes (metadata) CS 502 natural language processing CS 474

10 The Basics of Information Retrieval Query: A string of text, describing the information that the user is seeking. Each word of the query is called a search term. A query can be a single search term, a string of terms, a phrase in natural language, or a stylized expression using special symbols. Full text searching: Methods that compare the query with every word in the text, without distinguishing the function of the various words. Fielded searching: Methods that search on specific bibliographic or structural fields, such as author or heading.

11 Descriptive metadata Some methods of information discovery search descriptive metadata about the objects. Metadata typically consists of a catalog or indexing record, or an abstract, one record for each object. The record acts as a surrogate for the object. Usually stored separately from the objects that it describes, but sometimes is embedded in the objects. Usually the metadata is a set of text fields. Textual metadata can be used to describe non-textual objects, e.g., software, images, music

12 Descriptive metadata Catalog: metadata records that have a consistent structure, organized according to systematic rules. Abstract: a free text record that summarizes a longer document. Indexing record: less formal than a catalog record, but more structure than a simple abstract.

13 Documents and Surrogates The sea is calm to-night. The tide is full, the moon lies fair Upon the straits;--on the French coast the light Gleams and is gone; the cliffs of England stand, Glimmering and vast, out in the tranquil bay. Come to the window, sweet is the night-air! Only, from the long line of spray Where the sea meets the moon-blanch'd land, Listen! you hear the grating roar Of pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling, At their return, up the high strand, Begin, and cease, and then again begin, With tremulous cadence slow, and bring The eternal note of sadness in. Author: Matthew Arnold Title: Dover Beach Genre: Poem Date: 1851 Document Surrogate (catalog record) Notes: 1. The surrogate is also a document 2. Every word is different!

14 Lexicon and thesaurus Lexicon contains information about words, their morphological variants, and their grammatical usage. Thesaurus relates words by meaning: ship, vessel, sail; craft, navy, marine, fleet, flotilla book, writing, work, volume, tome, tract, codex search, discovery, detection, find, revelation (From Roget's Thesaurus, 1911)

15 Surrogates for non-textual materials Textual catalog record about a non-textual item (photograph) Surrogate Text based methods of information retrieval can search a surrogate for a photograph

16 Library of Congress catalog record CREATED/PUBLISHED: [between 1925 and 1930?] SUMMARY: U. S. President Calvin Coolidge sits at a desk and signs a photograph, probably in Denver, Colorado. A group of unidentified men look on. NOTES: Title supplied by cataloger. Source: Morey Engle. SUBJECTS: Coolidge, Calvin, Presidents--United States Autographing--Colorado--Denver Denver (Colo.) Photographic prints. MEDIUM: 1 photoprint ; 21 x 26 cm. (8 x 10 in.)

17 Automatic indexing Creating catalog records manually is labor intensive and hence expensive. The aim of automatic indexing is to build indexes and retrieve information without human intervention. History Much of the fundamental research in automatic indexing was carried out by Gerald Salton, Professor of Computer Science at Cornell, and his graduate students.

18 Recall and Precision If information retrieval were perfect... Every hit would be relevant to the original query, and every relevant item in the body of information would be found. Precision: percentage of the hits that are relevant, the extent to which the set of hits retrieved by a query satisfies the requirement that generated the query. Recall: percentage of the relevant items that are found by the query, the extent to which the query found all the items that satisfy the requirement.

19 Recall and Precision: Example Collection of 10,000 documents, 50 on a specific topic Ideal search finds these 50 documents and reject others Actual search identifies 25 documents; 20 are relevant but 5 were on other topics Precision: 20/ 25 = 0.8 Recall: 20/50 = 0.4

20 Measuring Precision and Recall Precision is easy to measure: A knowledgeable person looks at each document that is identified and decides whether it is relevant. In the example, only the 25 documents that are found need to be examined. Recall is difficult to measure: To know all relevant items, a knowledgeable person must go through the entire collection, looking at every object to decide if it fits the criteria. In the example, all 10,000 documents must be examined.

21 History Much of the work on evaluation of information retrieval derives from the ASLIB Cranfied projects led by Cyril Cleverdon, which began in 1957.