Domain-specific Information Retrieval system with a correspondence graph

Author(s):  
Armin Azarian ◽  
Ali Siadat ◽  
Jean-Luc Bauchat
Polibits ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
pp. 27-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saïd Radhouani ◽  
Claire-Lise Mottaz Jiang ◽  
Gilles Falquet

2009 ◽  
Vol 18 (02) ◽  
pp. 331-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
SAMIR KECHID ◽  
HABIBA DRIAS

The World Wide Web knows an incessant and very fast development. Currently, finding useful information on the Web is a time consuming process. In this paper, we present PIRS a personalized Information Retrieval System in a distributed environment. Most prior research in distributed information access focused on selecting and merging information that has the most relevant content according to the query but ignored the user's specific needs. The underlying idea is that different users have different backgrounds, goals and interests when seeking information and thus, the same query may cover different specific information needs according to who emitted it. However, with the ever expanding Web, users are faced with a huge number of information resources. Consequently, such query-based information access strategies lead to inaccurate query results. PIRS extends the state of the art in a Web-based information retrieval system in distributed environment. First, it develops models for representing both user and information source using feature based profiles. Second, PIRS expands a user query according to his profile. Third, it develops algorithms for source selection and results merging that personalize the computation of the relevance score of a document in response to the user's query. PIRS has been experimented with several known information source. The experimental results obtained show the effectiveness of our approach.


Ontology provide a structured way of describing knowledge. Ontology's are usually repositories of concepts and relations between them, so using them in information retrieval seems to be a reasonable goal. The main objective in this report is to provide efficient means to move from keyword-based to concept-based information retrieval utilizing ontology's for conceptual definitions [1]. In this paper, we present the skeleton of such an IR system which works on a collection of domain specific documents and exploits the use of a domain specific ontology to improve the overall number of relevant documents retrieved. In this system, a user enters a query from which the meaningful concepts are extracted; using these concepts and domain ontology, query expansion is performed. We propose a system that matches the query terms in the ontology/schema graph and exploits the surrounding knowledge to derive an enhanced query. The enhanced query is given to the underlying basic keyword search system LUCENE [2]. In this approach we try to make use of more ontological Knowledge than IS-A and HAS-A relationships and synonyms for information retrieval.


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