scholarly journals Query Sense Discovery Approach to Realize the User's Search Intent

2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 0-0

The main goal of information retrieval is getting the most relevant documents to a user’s query. So, a search engine must not only understand the meaning of each keyword in the query but also their relative senses in the context of the query. Discovering the query meaning is a comprehensive and evolutionary process; the precise meaning of the query is established as developing the association between concepts. The meaning determination process is modeled by a dynamic system operating in the semantic space of WordNet. To capture the meaning of a user query, the original query is reformulating into candidate queries by combining the concepts and their synonyms. A semantic score characterizing the overall meaning of such queries is calculated, the one with the highest score was used to perform the search. The results confirm that the proposed "Query Sense Discovery" approach provides a significant improvement in several performance measures.

Author(s):  
Cláudio Elízio Calazans Campelo ◽  
Cláudio de Souza Baptista ◽  
Ricardo Madeira Fernandes

It is well known that documents available on the Web are extremely heterogeneous in several aspects, such as the use of various idioms, different formats to represent the contents, besides other external factors like source reputation, refresh frequency, and so forth (Page & Brin, 1998). Altogether, these factors increase the complexity of Web information retrieval systems. Superficially, traditional search engines available on the Web nowadays consist of retrieving documents that contain keywords informed by users. Nevertheless, among the variety of search possibilities, it is evident that the user needs a process that involves more sophisticated analysis; for example, temporal or spatial contextualization might be considered. In these keyword-based search engines, for instance, a Web page containing the phrase “…due to the company arrival in London, a thousand java programming jobs will be open…” would not be found if the submitted search was “jobs programming England,” unless the word “England” appeared in another phrase of the page. The explanation to this fact is that the term “London” is treated merely like another word, instead of regarding its geographical position. In a spatial search engine, the expected behavior would be to return the page described in the previous example, since the system shall have information indicating that the term “London” refers to a city located in a country referred to by the term “England.” This result could only be feasible in a traditional search engine if the user repeatedly submitted searches for all possible England sub-regions (e.g., cities). In accordance with the example, it is reasonable that for several user searches, the most interesting results are those related to certain geographical regions. A variety of features extraction and automatic document classification techniques have been proposed, however, acquiring Web-page geographical features involves some peculiar complexities, such as ambiguity (e.g., many places with the same name, various names for a single place, things with place names, etc.). Moreover, a Web page can refer to a place that contains or is contained by the one informed in the user query, which implies knowing the different region topologies used by the system. Many features related to geographical context can be added to the process of elaborating relevance ranking for returned documents. For example, a document can be more relevant than another one if its content refers to a place closer to the user location. Nonetheless, in spatial search engines, there are more complex issues to be considered because of the spatial dimension concerning on ranking elaboration. Jones, Alani, and Tudhope (2001) propose a combination of Euclidian distance between place centroids with hierarchical distances in order to generate a hybrid spatial distance that may be used in the relevance ranking elaboration of returned documents. Further important issues are the indexing mechanisms and query processing. In general, these solutions try to combine well-known textual indexing techniques (e.g., inverted files) with spatial indexing mechanisms. On the subject of user interface, spatial search engines are more complex, because users need to choose regions of interest, as well as possible spatial relationships, in addition to keywords. To visualize the results, it is pleasant to use digital map resources besides textual information.


Author(s):  
Radha Guha

Background:: In the era of information overload it is very difficult for a human reader to make sense of the vast information available in the internet quickly. Even for a specific domain like college or university website it may be difficult for a user to browse through all the links to get the relevant answers quickly. Objective:: In this scenario, design of a chat-bot which can answer questions related to college information and compare between colleges will be very useful and novel. Methods:: In this paper a novel conversational interface chat-bot application with information retrieval and text summariza-tion skill is designed and implemented. Firstly this chat-bot has a simple dialog skill when it can understand the user query intent, it responds from the stored collection of answers. Secondly for unknown queries, this chat-bot can search the internet and then perform text summarization using advanced techniques of natural language processing (NLP) and text mining (TM). Results:: The advancement of NLP capability of information retrieval and text summarization using machine learning tech-niques of Latent Semantic Analysis(LSI), Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA), Word2Vec, Global Vector (GloVe) and Tex-tRank are reviewed and compared in this paper first before implementing them for the chat-bot design. This chat-bot im-proves user experience tremendously by getting answers to specific queries concisely which takes less time than to read the entire document. Students, parents and faculty can get the answers for variety of information like admission criteria, fees, course offerings, notice board, attendance, grades, placements, faculty profile, research papers and patents etc. more effi-ciently. Conclusion:: The purpose of this paper was to follow the advancement in NLP technologies and implement them in a novel application.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (S1) ◽  
pp. 10-10
Author(s):  
Vigdis Lauvrak ◽  
Kelly Farrah ◽  
Rosmin Esmail ◽  
Anna Lien Espeland ◽  
Elisabet Hafstad ◽  
...  

IntroductionIn 2019, the Norwegian Institute for Public Health and Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH) received support from HTAi to produce a quarterly current awareness alert for the HTAi Disinvestment and Early Awareness Interest Group in collaboration with the HTAi Information Retrieval Interest Group. The alert focuses on methods and topical issues, and broader forecasts of potentially disruptive technologies that may be of interest to those involved in horizon scanning and disinvestment initiatives in health technology assessment (HTA).MethodsInformation specialists at both agencies developed search strategies for disinvestment and for horizon scanning in PubMed and Google. The template for the alert was based on an e-newsletter developed by the Information Retrieval Interest Group. Information specialists and researchers reviewed the monthly (PubMed) and weekly (Google) search results and selected potentially relevant publications. Additional sources were also identified through regular HTA and horizon scanning work.ResultsAlerts are posted quarterly on the HTAi Interest Group website; members receive an email notice when new alerts are available. While the revised PubMed searches are identifying relevant information, Google alerts have been disappointing, and this search may need to be revised further or dropped. When the one-year pilot project ends, in Fall 2020, interest group members will be surveyed to see if the alerts were useful, and whether they have suggestions for improving them.ConclusionsCollaborating on this alert service reduces duplication of effort between agencies, and makes new research in horizon scanning and disinvestment more accessible to colleagues in other agencies working in these areas.


Author(s):  
Tahar Rafa ◽  
Samir Kechid

The user-centred information retrieval needs to introduce semantics into the user modelling for a meaningful representation of user interests. The semantic representation of the user interests helps to improve the identification of the user’s future cognitive needs. In this paper, we present a semantic-based approach for a personalised information retrieval. This approach is based on the design and the exploitation of a user profile to represent the user and his interests. In this user profile, we combine an ontological semantics issued from WordNet ontology, and a personal semantics issued from the different user interactions with the search system and with his social and situational contexts of his previous searches. The personal semantics considers the co-occurrence relations between relevant components of the user profile as semantic links. The user profile is used to improve two important phases of the information search process: (i) expansion of the initial user query and (ii) adaptation of the search results to the user interests.


Author(s):  
Nobuyoshi Sato ◽  
Minoru Udagawa ◽  
Minoru Uehara ◽  
Yoshifumi Sakai ◽  
Hideki Mori

2016 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 637-660 ◽  
Author(s):  
Germán Kruszewski ◽  
Denis Paperno ◽  
Raffaella Bernardi ◽  
Marco Baroni

Logical negation is a challenge for distributional semantics, because predicates and their negations tend to occur in very similar contexts, and consequently their distributional vectors are very similar. Indeed, it is not even clear what properties a “negated” distributional vector should possess. However, when linguistic negation is considered in its actual discourse usage, it often performs a role that is quite different from straightforward logical negation. If someone states, in the middle of a conversation, that “This is not a dog,” the negation strongly suggests a restricted set of alternative predicates that might hold true of the object being talked about. In particular, other canids and middle-sized mammals are plausible alternatives, birds are less likely, skyscrapers and other large buildings virtually impossible. Conversational negation acts like a graded similarity function, of the sort that distributional semantics might be good at capturing. In this article, we introduce a large data set of alternative plausibility ratings for conversationally negated nominal predicates, and we show that simple similarity in distributional semantic space provides an excellent fit to subject data. On the one hand, this fills a gap in the literature on conversational negation, proposing distributional semantics as the right tool to make explicit predictions about potential alternatives of negated predicates. On the other hand, the results suggest that negation, when addressed from a broader pragmatic perspective, far from being a nuisance, is an ideal application domain for distributional semantic methods.


2010 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 261-263
Author(s):  
Laila Sohail

No debate is as engaging in the twenty-first century, as the one surrounding the phenomenon of globalisation. Economists, political scientists public policy experts, and specialists from a range of diverse disciplines are attracted to analyse this phenomenon and apply it to the world around them. The analysts are generally divided in two camps—those who praise globalisation as an evolutionary process leading to peace and prosperity, and those for whom globalisation is a curse instigating violence and conflict by undermining the role of the State and adversely affecting democracy.


2018 ◽  
Vol 167 ◽  
pp. 375-383
Author(s):  
Valentyna Gerasymchuk

Existence and nonexistence of death in the semantic picture of reality and artistic text on the material of romans Leonid Leonov Road to the Ocean and Maxim Gorkogo The Life of Klim SamginIn this article the problem of death is unfolding in the semantic space of its ontological and existential conception in reality and a literary text. On the one hand, death as the concept of being is presented as its continuation, spiritual content, confirmation. On the other hand, death as a concept of non-being is considered as nothingness, rejection of being and its spiritual content.In reality the concept of death becomes an issue of the questionary and transcendental philosophy, that takes place in the physical time and metaphysical space of thought and expression. When the matter concerns the death of human being, his death acquires an ontological status of being, a status of spiritual significance. In the contrary case, it is possible to consider death and even life in terms of the concepts of being and nothingness. In literary texts the concept of death is also considered to be being or non-being, but taking into account constitutive characteristics of the text, its figurative and notional polysemant, the concept of death acquires not only aesthetic but also conceptual focus. In the article the main points of the topic of death, its being and non-being, are illustrated on the examples of specific literary texts. Буття і небуття смерті в смисловій картині реальності і художньому текстіПроблема смерті у статті розгортається в смисловому просторі онтологічного і екзистенціалістського її розуміння в реальності і в художньому тексті. З одного боку, смерть — поняття буття — постає як його продовження, його духовна наповненість, його стверждення. З другого — смерть — поняття небуття — розглядається як ніщо, як заперечення буття і його духовної наповненості.У реальності поняття смерті стає проблемою запитальної, трансцендентальної філософії, що розгортається у фізичному часі і метафізичному просторі думки і слова. І якщо йдеться про смерть буттюючої особистості, то і її смерть набуває онтологічного статусу, статусу духовної значущості, інакше можна говорити про смерть і навіть життя у поняттях небуття і ніщо. У художніх текстах поняття смерті також розглядається як буття і небуття, проте з урахуванням конститутивних особливостей тексту, його образної і смислової багатозначності, образ смерті набуває, крім онтологічної, ще й естетичну спрямованість.


Webology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (SI02) ◽  
pp. 21-31
Author(s):  
P. Mahalakshmi ◽  
N. Sabiyath Fathima

Basically keywords are used to index and retrieve the documents for the user query in a conventional information retrieval systems. When more than one keywords are used for defining the single concept in the documents and in the queries, inaccurate and incomplete results were produced by keyword based retrieval systems. Additionally, manual interventions are required for determining the relationship between the related keywords in terms of semantics to produce the accurate results which have paved the way for semantic search. Various research work has been carried out on concept based information retrieval to tackle the difficulties that are caused by the conventional keyword search and the semantic search systems. This paper aims at elucidating various representation of text that is responsible for retrieving relevant search results, approaches along with the evaluation that are carried out in conceptual information retrieval, the challenges faced by the existing research to expatiate requirements of future research. In addition, the conceptual information that are extracted from the different sources for utilizing the semantic representation by the existing systems have been discussed.


Author(s):  
Humberto Oliveira Serra ◽  
Lucas Bezerra Maia ◽  
Alexis Salomon ◽  
Nigel da Silva Lima ◽  
Rubem de Sousa Silva ◽  
...  

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