1,372 research outputs found
CLARITY at the TREC 2011 microblog track
For the first year of the TREC Microblog Track the CLARITY group concentrated on a number of areas, investigating the underlying term weighting scheme for ranking tweets, incorporating query expansion to introduce new terms into the query, as well as introducing an element of temporal re-weighting based on the temporal distribution of assumed relevant microblogs
Time Aware Knowledge Extraction for Microblog Summarization on Twitter
Microblogging services like Twitter and Facebook collect millions of user
generated content every moment about trending news, occurring events, and so
on. Nevertheless, it is really a nightmare to find information of interest
through the huge amount of available posts that are often noise and redundant.
In general, social media analytics services have caught increasing attention
from both side research and industry. Specifically, the dynamic context of
microblogging requires to manage not only meaning of information but also the
evolution of knowledge over the timeline. This work defines Time Aware
Knowledge Extraction (briefly TAKE) methodology that relies on temporal
extension of Fuzzy Formal Concept Analysis. In particular, a microblog
summarization algorithm has been defined filtering the concepts organized by
TAKE in a time-dependent hierarchy. The algorithm addresses topic-based
summarization on Twitter. Besides considering the timing of the concepts,
another distinguish feature of the proposed microblog summarization framework
is the possibility to have more or less detailed summary, according to the
user's needs, with good levels of quality and completeness as highlighted in
the experimental results.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figure
EveTAR: Building a Large-Scale Multi-Task Test Collection over Arabic Tweets
This article introduces a new language-independent approach for creating a
large-scale high-quality test collection of tweets that supports multiple
information retrieval (IR) tasks without running a shared-task campaign. The
adopted approach (demonstrated over Arabic tweets) designs the collection
around significant (i.e., popular) events, which enables the development of
topics that represent frequent information needs of Twitter users for which
rich content exists. That inherently facilitates the support of multiple tasks
that generally revolve around events, namely event detection, ad-hoc search,
timeline generation, and real-time summarization. The key highlights of the
approach include diversifying the judgment pool via interactive search and
multiple manually-crafted queries per topic, collecting high-quality
annotations via crowd-workers for relevancy and in-house annotators for
novelty, filtering out low-agreement topics and inaccessible tweets, and
providing multiple subsets of the collection for better availability. Applying
our methodology on Arabic tweets resulted in EveTAR , the first
freely-available tweet test collection for multiple IR tasks. EveTAR includes a
crawl of 355M Arabic tweets and covers 50 significant events for which about
62K tweets were judged with substantial average inter-annotator agreement
(Kappa value of 0.71). We demonstrate the usability of EveTAR by evaluating
existing algorithms in the respective tasks. Results indicate that the new
collection can support reliable ranking of IR systems that is comparable to
similar TREC collections, while providing strong baseline results for future
studies over Arabic tweets
Modeling Temporal Evidence from External Collections
Newsworthy events are broadcast through multiple mediums and prompt the
crowds to produce comments on social media. In this paper, we propose to
leverage on this behavioral dynamics to estimate the most relevant time periods
for an event (i.e., query). Recent advances have shown how to improve the
estimation of the temporal relevance of such topics. In this approach, we build
on two major novelties. First, we mine temporal evidences from hundreds of
external sources into topic-based external collections to improve the
robustness of the detection of relevant time periods. Second, we propose a
formal retrieval model that generalizes the use of the temporal dimension
across different aspects of the retrieval process. In particular, we show that
temporal evidence of external collections can be used to (i) infer a topic's
temporal relevance, (ii) select the query expansion terms, and (iii) re-rank
the final results for improved precision. Experiments with TREC Microblog
collections show that the proposed time-aware retrieval model makes an
effective and extensive use of the temporal dimension to improve search results
over the most recent temporal models. Interestingly, we observe a strong
correlation between precision and the temporal distribution of retrieved and
relevant documents.Comment: To appear in WSDM 201
Multi-Perspective Relevance Matching with Hierarchical ConvNets for Social Media Search
Despite substantial interest in applications of neural networks to
information retrieval, neural ranking models have only been applied to standard
ad hoc retrieval tasks over web pages and newswire documents. This paper
proposes MP-HCNN (Multi-Perspective Hierarchical Convolutional Neural Network)
a novel neural ranking model specifically designed for ranking short social
media posts. We identify document length, informal language, and heterogeneous
relevance signals as features that distinguish documents in our domain, and
present a model specifically designed with these characteristics in mind. Our
model uses hierarchical convolutional layers to learn latent semantic
soft-match relevance signals at the character, word, and phrase levels. A
pooling-based similarity measurement layer integrates evidence from multiple
types of matches between the query, the social media post, as well as URLs
contained in the post. Extensive experiments using Twitter data from the TREC
Microblog Tracks 2011--2014 show that our model significantly outperforms prior
feature-based as well and existing neural ranking models. To our best
knowledge, this paper presents the first substantial work tackling search over
social media posts using neural ranking models.Comment: AAAI 2019, 10 page
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