1,511 research outputs found
On Type-Aware Entity Retrieval
Today, the practice of returning entities from a knowledge base in response
to search queries has become widespread. One of the distinctive characteristics
of entities is that they are typed, i.e., assigned to some hierarchically
organized type system (type taxonomy). The primary objective of this paper is
to gain a better understanding of how entity type information can be utilized
in entity retrieval. We perform this investigation in an idealized "oracle"
setting, assuming that we know the distribution of target types of the relevant
entities for a given query. We perform a thorough analysis of three main
aspects: (i) the choice of type taxonomy, (ii) the representation of
hierarchical type information, and (iii) the combination of type-based and
term-based similarity in the retrieval model. Using a standard entity search
test collection based on DBpedia, we find that type information proves most
useful when using large type taxonomies that provide very specific types. We
provide further insights on the extensional coverage of entities and on the
utility of target types.Comment: Proceedings of the 3rd ACM International Conference on the Theory of
Information Retrieval (ICTIR '17), 201
Entity Query Feature Expansion Using Knowledge Base Links
Recent advances in automatic entity linking and knowledge base
construction have resulted in entity annotations for document and
query collections. For example, annotations of entities from large
general purpose knowledge bases, such as Freebase and the Google
Knowledge Graph. Understanding how to leverage these entity
annotations of text to improve ad hoc document retrieval is an open
research area. Query expansion is a commonly used technique to
improve retrieval effectiveness. Most previous query expansion
approaches focus on text, mainly using unigram concepts. In this
paper, we propose a new technique, called entity query feature
expansion (EQFE) which enriches the query with features from
entities and their links to knowledge bases, including structured
attributes and text. We experiment using both explicit query entity
annotations and latent entities. We evaluate our technique on TREC
text collections automatically annotated with knowledge base entity
links, including the Google Freebase Annotations (FACC1) data.
We find that entity-based feature expansion results in significant
improvements in retrieval effectiveness over state-of-the-art text
expansion approaches
Overview of INEX Tweet Contextualization 2013 track
International audienceTwitter is increasingly used for on-line client and audience fishing; this motivated the tweet contextualization task at INEX. The objective is to help a user to understand a tweet by providing him with a short summary (500 words). This summary should be built automatically using local resources like the Wikipedia and generated by extracting relevant passages and aggregating them into a coherent summary. The task is evaluated considering informativeness which is computed using a variant of Kullback-Leibler divergence and passage pooling. Meanwhile effective readability in context of summaries is checked using binary questionnaires on small samples of results. Running since 2010, results show that only systems that efficiently combine passage retrieval, sentence segmentation and scoring, named entity recognition, text POS analysis, anaphora detection, diversity content measure as well as sentence reordering are effective
Overview of the INEX 2014 Interactive Social Book Search Track
Abstract. Users looking for books online are confronted with both pro-fessional meta-data and user-generated content. The goal of the Interac-tive Social Book Search Track was to investigate how users used these two sources of information, when looking for books in a leisure context. To this end participants recruited by four teams performed two different tasks using one of two book-search interfaces. Additionally one of the two interfaces also investigated whether user performance can be improved by providing a user-interface that supports multiple search stages.
Neural Architecture for Question Answering Using a Knowledge Graph and Web Corpus
In Web search, entity-seeking queries often trigger a special Question
Answering (QA) system. It may use a parser to interpret the question to a
structured query, execute that on a knowledge graph (KG), and return direct
entity responses. QA systems based on precise parsing tend to be brittle: minor
syntax variations may dramatically change the response. Moreover, KG coverage
is patchy. At the other extreme, a large corpus may provide broader coverage,
but in an unstructured, unreliable form. We present AQQUCN, a QA system that
gracefully combines KG and corpus evidence. AQQUCN accepts a broad spectrum of
query syntax, between well-formed questions to short `telegraphic' keyword
sequences. In the face of inherent query ambiguities, AQQUCN aggregates signals
from KGs and large corpora to directly rank KG entities, rather than commit to
one semantic interpretation of the query. AQQUCN models the ideal
interpretation as an unobservable or latent variable. Interpretations and
candidate entity responses are scored as pairs, by combining signals from
multiple convolutional networks that operate collectively on the query, KG and
corpus. On four public query workloads, amounting to over 8,000 queries with
diverse query syntax, we see 5--16% absolute improvement in mean average
precision (MAP), compared to the entity ranking performance of recent systems.
Our system is also competitive at entity set retrieval, almost doubling F1
scores for challenging short queries.Comment: Accepted to Information Retrieval Journa
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