An evidence perspective on topical relevance types and its implications for exploratory and task-based retrieval

<br><b>Introduction.</b> The concept of relevance lies at the heart of intellectual access and information retrieval, indeed of reasoning and communication in general; in turn, topical relevance lies at the heart of relevance. The common view of topical relevance is limited to top...

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Main Authors: Xiaoli Huang, Dagobert Soergel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Borås 2006-01-01
Series:Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://informationr.net/ir/12-1/paper281.html
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author Xiaoli Huang
Dagobert Soergel
author_facet Xiaoli Huang
Dagobert Soergel
author_sort Xiaoli Huang
collection DOAJ
description <br><b>Introduction.</b> The concept of relevance lies at the heart of intellectual access and information retrieval, indeed of reasoning and communication in general; in turn, topical relevance lies at the heart of relevance. The common view of topical relevance is limited to topic matching, resulting in information retrieval systems' failure to detect more complex topical connections which are needed to respond to diversified user situations and tasks. <br><b>Method.</b> Based on the role a piece of information plays in the overall structure of an argument, we have identified four topical relevance types: Direct, Indirect (circumstantial), Context, and Comparison. In the process of creating a speech retrieval test collection, graduate history students made 27,000 topical relevance assessments between Holocaust survivor interview segments and real user topics, using the four relevance types, each on a scale of 0 to 4. They recorded justifications for their assessments and kept detailed Topic Notes. <br><b>Analysis.</b> We analysed these relevance assessments using a grounded theory approach to arrive at a finer classification of topical relevance types. <br><b>Results.</b> For example, indirect relevance(a piece of information is connected to the topic indirectly through inference, circumstantial evidence) was refined to Generic Indirect Relevance, Backward Inference (abduction), Forward Inference (deduction), and Inference from Cases (induction), with each subtype being further illustrated and explicated by examples. <br><b>Conclusion.</b> Each of these refined types of topical relevance plays a special role in reasoning, making a conclusive argument, or performing a task. Incorporating them into information retrieval systems allows users more flexibility and a better focus on their tasks. They can also be used in teaching reasoning skills.
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spelling doaj-art-8a3d4ebb2dde487f984a88cd245a7e9c2025-02-03T01:15:07ZengUniversity of BoråsInformation Research: An International Electronic Journal1368-16132006-01-01121281An evidence perspective on topical relevance types and its implications for exploratory and task-based retrievalXiaoli HuangDagobert Soergel<br><b>Introduction.</b> The concept of relevance lies at the heart of intellectual access and information retrieval, indeed of reasoning and communication in general; in turn, topical relevance lies at the heart of relevance. The common view of topical relevance is limited to topic matching, resulting in information retrieval systems' failure to detect more complex topical connections which are needed to respond to diversified user situations and tasks. <br><b>Method.</b> Based on the role a piece of information plays in the overall structure of an argument, we have identified four topical relevance types: Direct, Indirect (circumstantial), Context, and Comparison. In the process of creating a speech retrieval test collection, graduate history students made 27,000 topical relevance assessments between Holocaust survivor interview segments and real user topics, using the four relevance types, each on a scale of 0 to 4. They recorded justifications for their assessments and kept detailed Topic Notes. <br><b>Analysis.</b> We analysed these relevance assessments using a grounded theory approach to arrive at a finer classification of topical relevance types. <br><b>Results.</b> For example, indirect relevance(a piece of information is connected to the topic indirectly through inference, circumstantial evidence) was refined to Generic Indirect Relevance, Backward Inference (abduction), Forward Inference (deduction), and Inference from Cases (induction), with each subtype being further illustrated and explicated by examples. <br><b>Conclusion.</b> Each of these refined types of topical relevance plays a special role in reasoning, making a conclusive argument, or performing a task. Incorporating them into information retrieval systems allows users more flexibility and a better focus on their tasks. They can also be used in teaching reasoning skills.http://informationr.net/ir/12-1/paper281.htmlTopical relevance
spellingShingle Xiaoli Huang
Dagobert Soergel
An evidence perspective on topical relevance types and its implications for exploratory and task-based retrieval
Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Topical relevance
title An evidence perspective on topical relevance types and its implications for exploratory and task-based retrieval
title_full An evidence perspective on topical relevance types and its implications for exploratory and task-based retrieval
title_fullStr An evidence perspective on topical relevance types and its implications for exploratory and task-based retrieval
title_full_unstemmed An evidence perspective on topical relevance types and its implications for exploratory and task-based retrieval
title_short An evidence perspective on topical relevance types and its implications for exploratory and task-based retrieval
title_sort evidence perspective on topical relevance types and its implications for exploratory and task based retrieval
topic Topical relevance
url http://informationr.net/ir/12-1/paper281.html
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AT xiaolihuang evidenceperspectiveontopicalrelevancetypesanditsimplicationsforexploratoryandtaskbasedretrieval
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