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Information retrieval

Information retrieval (IR) in computing and information science is the process of obtaining information system resources that are relevant to an information need from a collection of those resources. Searches can be based on full-text or other content-based indexing. Information retrieval is the science[1] of searching for information in a document, searching for documents themselves, and also searching for the metadata that describes data, and for databases of texts, images or sounds.

Automated information retrieval systems are used to reduce what has been called information overload. An IR system is a software system that provides access to books, journals and other documents; stores and manages those documents. Web search engines are the most visible IR applications.

Overview

An information retrieval process begins when a user or searcher enters a query into the system. Queries are formal statements of information needs, for example search strings in web search engines. In information retrieval a query does not uniquely identify a single object in the collection. Instead, several objects may match the query, perhaps with different degrees of relevance.

An object is an entity that is represented by information in a content collection or database. User queries are matched against the database information. However, as opposed to classical SQL queries of a database, in information retrieval the results returned may or may not match the query, so results are typically ranked. This ranking of results is a key difference of information retrieval searching compared to database searching.[2]

Depending on the application the data objects may be, for example, text documents, images,[3] audio,[4] mind maps[5] or videos. Often the documents themselves are not kept or stored directly in the IR system, but are instead represented in the system by document surrogates or metadata.

Most IR systems compute a numeric score on how well each object in the database matches the query, and rank the objects according to this value. The top ranking objects are then shown to the user. The process may then be iterated if the user wishes to refine the query.[6]

History

there is ... a machine called the Univac ... whereby letters and figures are coded as a pattern of magnetic spots on a long steel tape. By this means the text of a document, preceded by its subject code symbol, can be recorded ... the machine ... automatically selects and types out those references which have been coded in any desired way at a rate of 120 words a minute

— J. E. Holmstrom, 1948

The idea of using computers to search for relevant pieces of information was popularized in the article As We May Think by Vannevar Bush in 1945.[7] It would appear that Bush was inspired by patents for a 'statistical machine' - filed by Emanuel Goldberg in the 1920s and '30s - that searched for documents stored on film.[8] The first description of a computer searching for information was described by Holmstrom in 1948,[9] detailing an early mention of the Univac computer. Automated information retrieval systems were introduced in the 1950s: one even featured in the 1957 romantic comedy, Desk Set. In the 1960s, the first large information retrieval research group was formed by Gerard Salton at Cornell. By the 1970s several different retrieval techniques had been shown to perform well on small text corpora such as the Cranfield collection (several thousand documents).[7] Large-scale retrieval systems, such as the Lockheed Dialog system, came into use early in the 1970s.

In 1992, the US Department of Defense along with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), cosponsored the Text Retrieval Conference (TREC) as part of the TIPSTER text program. The aim of this was to look into the information retrieval community by supplying the infrastructure that was needed for evaluation of text retrieval methodologies on a very large text collection. This catalyzed research on methods that scale to huge corpora. The introduction of web search engines has boosted the need for very large scale retrieval systems even further.

Applications

Areas where information retrieval techniques are employed include (the entries are in alphabetical order within each category):

General applications

Domain-specific applications

Other retrieval methods

Methods/Techniques in which information retrieval techniques are employed include:

Model types

 
Categorization of IR-models (translated from German entry, original source Dominik Kuropka).

For effectively retrieving relevant documents by IR strategies, the documents are typically transformed into a suitable representation. Each retrieval strategy incorporates a specific model for its document representation purposes. The picture on the right illustrates the relationship of some common models. In the picture, the models are categorized according to two dimensions: the mathematical basis and the properties of the model.

First dimension: mathematical basis

Second dimension: properties of the model

  • Models without term-interdependencies treat different terms/words as independent. This fact is usually represented in vector space models by the orthogonality assumption of term vectors or in probabilistic models by an independency assumption for term variables.
  • Models with immanent term interdependencies allow a representation of interdependencies between terms. However the degree of the interdependency between two terms is defined by the model itself. It is usually directly or indirectly derived (e.g. by dimensional reduction) from the co-occurrence of those terms in the whole set of documents.
  • Models with transcendent term interdependencies allow a representation of interdependencies between terms, but they do not allege how the interdependency between two terms is defined. They rely an external source for the degree of interdependency between two terms. (For example, a human or sophisticated algorithms.)

Performance and correctness measures

The evaluation of an information retrieval system' is the process of assessing how well a system meets the information needs of its users. In general, measurement considers a collection of documents to be searched and a search query. Traditional evaluation metrics, designed for Boolean retrieval[clarification needed] or top-k retrieval, include precision and recall. All measures assume a ground truth notion of relevance: every document is known to be either relevant or non-relevant to a particular query. In practice, queries may be ill-posed and there may be different shades of relevance.

Timeline

  • Before the 1900s
    1801: Joseph Marie Jacquard invents the Jacquard loom, the first machine to use punched cards to control a sequence of operations.
    1880s: Herman Hollerith invents an electro-mechanical data tabulator using punch cards as a machine readable medium.
    1890 Hollerith cards, keypunches and tabulators used to process the 1890 US Census data.
  • 1920s-1930s
    Emanuel Goldberg submits patents for his "Statistical Machine” a document search engine that used photoelectric cells and pattern recognition to search the metadata on rolls of microfilmed documents.
  • 1940s–1950s
    late 1940s: The US military confronted problems of indexing and retrieval of wartime scientific research documents captured from Germans.
    1945: Vannevar Bush's As We May Think appeared in Atlantic Monthly.
    1947: Hans Peter Luhn (research engineer at IBM since 1941) began work on a mechanized punch card-based system for searching chemical compounds.
    1950s: Growing concern in the US for a "science gap" with the USSR motivated, encouraged funding and provided a backdrop for mechanized literature searching systems (Allen Kent et al.) and the invention of the citation index by Eugene Garfield.
    1950: The term "information retrieval" was coined by Calvin Mooers.[10]
    1951: Philip Bagley conducted the earliest experiment in computerized document retrieval in a master thesis at MIT.[11]
    1955: Allen Kent joined Case Western Reserve University, and eventually became associate director of the Center for Documentation and Communications Research. That same year, Kent and colleagues published a paper in American Documentation describing the precision and recall measures as well as detailing a proposed "framework" for evaluating an IR system which included statistical sampling methods for determining the number of relevant documents not retrieved.[12]
    1958: International Conference on Scientific Information Washington DC included consideration of IR systems as a solution to problems identified. See: Proceedings of the International Conference on Scientific Information, 1958 (National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC, 1959)
    1959: Hans Peter Luhn published "Auto-encoding of documents for information retrieval."
  • 1960s:
    early 1960s: Gerard Salton began work on IR at Harvard, later moved to Cornell.
    1960: Melvin Earl Maron and John Lary Kuhns[13] published "On relevance, probabilistic indexing, and information retrieval" in the Journal of the ACM 7(3):216–244, July 1960.
    1962:
    • Cyril W. Cleverdon published early findings of the Cranfield studies, developing a model for IR system evaluation. See: Cyril W. Cleverdon, "Report on the Testing and Analysis of an Investigation into the Comparative Efficiency of Indexing Systems". Cranfield Collection of Aeronautics, Cranfield, England, 1962.
    • Kent published Information Analysis and Retrieval.
    1963:
    • Weinberg report "Science, Government and Information" gave a full articulation of the idea of a "crisis of scientific information." The report was named after Dr. Alvin Weinberg.
    • Joseph Becker and Robert M. Hayes published text on information retrieval. Becker, Joseph; Hayes, Robert Mayo. Information storage and retrieval: tools, elements, theories. New York, Wiley (1963).
    1964:
    • Karen Spärck Jones finished her thesis at Cambridge, Synonymy and Semantic Classification, and continued work on computational linguistics as it applies to IR.
    • The National Bureau of Standards sponsored a symposium titled "Statistical Association Methods for Mechanized Documentation." Several highly significant papers, including G. Salton's first published reference (we believe) to the SMART system.
    mid-1960s:
    • National Library of Medicine developed MEDLARS Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System, the first major machine-readable database and batch-retrieval system.
    • Project Intrex at MIT.
    1965: J. C. R. Licklider published Libraries of the Future.
    1966: Don Swanson was involved in studies at University of Chicago on Requirements for Future Catalogs.
    late 1960s: F. Wilfrid Lancaster completed evaluation studies of the MEDLARS system and published the first edition of his text on information retrieval.
    1968:
    • Gerard Salton published Automatic Information Organization and Retrieval.
    • John W. Sammon, Jr.'s RADC Tech report "Some Mathematics of Information Storage and Retrieval..." outlined the vector model.
    1969: Sammon's "A nonlinear mapping for data structure analysis 2017-08-08 at the Wayback Machine" (IEEE Transactions on Computers) was the first proposal for visualization interface to an IR system.
  • 1970s
    early 1970s:
    • First online systems—NLM's AIM-TWX, MEDLINE; Lockheed's Dialog; SDC's ORBIT.
    • Theodor Nelson promoting concept of hypertext, published Computer Lib/Dream Machines.
    1971: Nicholas Jardine and Cornelis J. van Rijsbergen published "The use of hierarchic clustering in information retrieval", which articulated the "cluster hypothesis."[14]
    1975: Three highly influential publications by Salton fully articulated his vector processing framework and term discrimination model:
    • A Theory of Indexing (Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics)
    • A Theory of Term Importance in Automatic Text Analysis (JASIS v. 26)
    • A Vector Space Model for Automatic Indexing (CACM 18:11)
    1978: The First ACM SIGIR conference.
    1979: C. J. van Rijsbergen published Information Retrieval (Butterworths). Heavy emphasis on probabilistic models.
    1979: Tamas Doszkocs implemented the CITE natural language user interface for MEDLINE at the National Library of Medicine. The CITE system supported free form query input, ranked output and relevance feedback.[15]
  • 1980s
    1980: First international ACM SIGIR conference, joint with British Computer Society IR group in Cambridge.
    1982: Nicholas J. Belkin, Robert N. Oddy, and Helen M. Brooks proposed the ASK (Anomalous State of Knowledge) viewpoint for information retrieval. This was an important concept, though their automated analysis tool proved ultimately disappointing.
    1983: Salton (and Michael J. McGill) published Introduction to Modern Information Retrieval (McGraw-Hill), with heavy emphasis on vector models.
    1985: David Blair and Bill Maron publish: An Evaluation of Retrieval Effectiveness for a Full-Text Document-Retrieval System
    mid-1980s: Efforts to develop end-user versions of commercial IR systems.
    1985–1993: Key papers on and experimental systems for visualization interfaces.
    Work by Donald B. Crouch, Robert R. Korfhage, Matthew Chalmers, Anselm Spoerri and others.
    1989: First World Wide Web proposals by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN.
  • 1990s
    1992: First TREC conference.
    1997: Publication of Korfhage's Information Storage and Retrieval[16] with emphasis on visualization and multi-reference point systems.
    1999: Publication of Ricardo Baeza-Yates and Berthier Ribeiro-Neto's Modern Information Retrieval by Addison Wesley, the first book that attempts to cover all IR.
    late 1990s: Web search engines implementation of many features formerly found only in experimental IR systems. Search engines become the most common and maybe best instantiation of IR models.

Major conferences

Awards in the field

See also

References

  1. ^ Luk, R. W. P. (2022). "Why is information retrieval a scientific discipline?". Foundations of Science. 27 (2): 427–453. doi:10.1007/s10699-020-09685-x. S2CID 220506422.
  2. ^ Jansen, B. J. and Rieh, S. (2010) The Seventeen Theoretical Constructs of Information Searching and Information Retrieval 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine. Journal of the American Society for Information Sciences and Technology. 61(8), 1517-1534.
  3. ^ Goodrum, Abby A. (2000). "Image Information Retrieval: An Overview of Current Research". Informing Science. 3 (2).
  4. ^ Foote, Jonathan (1999). "An overview of audio information retrieval". Multimedia Systems. 7: 2–10. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.39.6339. doi:10.1007/s005300050106. S2CID 2000641.
  5. ^ Beel, Jöran; Gipp, Bela; Stiller, Jan-Olaf (2009). . Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Collaborative Computing: Networking, Applications and Worksharing (CollaborateCom'09). Washington, DC: IEEE. Archived from the original on 2011-05-13. Retrieved 2012-03-13.
  6. ^ Frakes, William B.; Baeza-Yates, Ricardo (1992). . Prentice-Hall, Inc. ISBN 978-0-13-463837-9. Archived from the original on 2013-09-28.
  7. ^ a b Singhal, Amit (2001). "Modern Information Retrieval: A Brief Overview" (PDF). Bulletin of the IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Data Engineering. 24 (4): 35–43.
  8. ^ Mark Sanderson & W. Bruce Croft (2012). "The History of Information Retrieval Research". Proceedings of the IEEE. 100: 1444–1451. doi:10.1109/jproc.2012.2189916.
  9. ^ JE Holmstrom (1948). "'Section III. Opening Plenary Session". The Royal Society Scientific Information Conference, 21 June-2 July 1948: Report and Papers Submitted: 85.
  10. ^ Mooers, Calvin N.; The Theory of Digital Handling of Non-numerical Information and its Implications to Machine Economics (Zator Technical Bulletin No. 48), cited in Fairthorne, R. A. (1958). "Automatic Retrieval of Recorded Information". The Computer Journal. 1 (1): 37. doi:10.1093/comjnl/1.1.36.
  11. ^ Doyle, Lauren; Becker, Joseph (1975). Information Retrieval and Processing. Melville. pp. 410 pp. ISBN 978-0-471-22151-7.
  12. ^ Perry, James W.; Kent, Allen; Berry, Madeline M. (1955). "Machine literature searching X. Machine language; factors underlying its design and development". American Documentation. 6 (4): 242–254. doi:10.1002/asi.5090060411.
  13. ^ Maron, Melvin E. (2008). "An Historical Note on the Origins of Probabilistic Indexing" (PDF). Information Processing and Management. 44 (2): 971–972. doi:10.1016/j.ipm.2007.02.012.
  14. ^ N. Jardine, C.J. van Rijsbergen (December 1971). "The use of hierarchic clustering in information retrieval". Information Storage and Retrieval. 7 (5): 217–240. doi:10.1016/0020-0271(71)90051-9.
  15. ^ Doszkocs, T.E. & Rapp, B.A. (1979). "Searching MEDLINE in English: a Prototype User Interface with Natural Language Query, Ranked Output, and relevance feedback," In: Proceedings of the ASIS Annual Meeting, 16: 131-139.
  16. ^ Korfhage, Robert R. (1997). Information Storage and Retrieval. Wiley. pp. 368 pp. ISBN 978-0-471-14338-3.

Further reading

  • Ricardo Baeza-Yates, Berthier Ribeiro-Neto. Modern Information Retrieval: The Concepts and Technology behind Search (second edition) 2017-09-18 at the Wayback Machine. Addison-Wesley, UK, 2011.
  • Stefan Büttcher, Charles L. A. Clarke, and Gordon V. Cormack. Information Retrieval: Implementing and Evaluating Search Engines 2020-10-05 at the Wayback Machine. MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2010.
  • "Information Retrieval System". Library & Information Science Network. 24 April 2015.
  • Christopher D. Manning, Prabhakar Raghavan, and Hinrich Schütze. Introduction to Information Retrieval. Cambridge University Press, 2008.

External links

  • ACM SIGIR: Information Retrieval Special Interest Group
  • BCS IRSG: British Computer Society - Information Retrieval Specialist Group
  • Text Retrieval Conference (TREC)
  • Forum for Information Retrieval Evaluation (FIRE)
  • Information Retrieval (online book) by C. J. van Rijsbergen
  • Information Retrieval Wiki 2015-11-24 at the Wayback Machine
  • Information Retrieval Facility 2008-05-22 at the Wayback Machine
  • Information Retrieval @ DUTH
  • TREC report on information retrieval evaluation techniques
  • How eBay measures search relevance
  • Information retrieval performance evaluation tool @ Athena Research Centre

information, retrieval, computing, information, science, process, obtaining, information, system, resources, that, relevant, information, need, from, collection, those, resources, searches, based, full, text, other, content, based, indexing, science, searching. Information retrieval IR in computing and information science is the process of obtaining information system resources that are relevant to an information need from a collection of those resources Searches can be based on full text or other content based indexing Information retrieval is the science 1 of searching for information in a document searching for documents themselves and also searching for the metadata that describes data and for databases of texts images or sounds Automated information retrieval systems are used to reduce what has been called information overload An IR system is a software system that provides access to books journals and other documents stores and manages those documents Web search engines are the most visible IR applications Contents 1 Overview 2 History 3 Applications 3 1 General applications 3 2 Domain specific applications 3 3 Other retrieval methods 4 Model types 4 1 First dimension mathematical basis 4 2 Second dimension properties of the model 5 Performance and correctness measures 6 Timeline 7 Major conferences 8 Awards in the field 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksOverview EditAn information retrieval process begins when a user or searcher enters a query into the system Queries are formal statements of information needs for example search strings in web search engines In information retrieval a query does not uniquely identify a single object in the collection Instead several objects may match the query perhaps with different degrees of relevance An object is an entity that is represented by information in a content collection or database User queries are matched against the database information However as opposed to classical SQL queries of a database in information retrieval the results returned may or may not match the query so results are typically ranked This ranking of results is a key difference of information retrieval searching compared to database searching 2 Depending on the application the data objects may be for example text documents images 3 audio 4 mind maps 5 or videos Often the documents themselves are not kept or stored directly in the IR system but are instead represented in the system by document surrogates or metadata Most IR systems compute a numeric score on how well each object in the database matches the query and rank the objects according to this value The top ranking objects are then shown to the user The process may then be iterated if the user wishes to refine the query 6 History Editthere is a machine called the Univac whereby letters and figures are coded as a pattern of magnetic spots on a long steel tape By this means the text of a document preceded by its subject code symbol can be recorded the machine automatically selects and types out those references which have been coded in any desired way at a rate of 120 words a minute J E Holmstrom 1948 The idea of using computers to search for relevant pieces of information was popularized in the article As We May Think by Vannevar Bush in 1945 7 It would appear that Bush was inspired by patents for a statistical machine filed by Emanuel Goldberg in the 1920s and 30s that searched for documents stored on film 8 The first description of a computer searching for information was described by Holmstrom in 1948 9 detailing an early mention of the Univac computer Automated information retrieval systems were introduced in the 1950s one even featured in the 1957 romantic comedy Desk Set In the 1960s the first large information retrieval research group was formed by Gerard Salton at Cornell By the 1970s several different retrieval techniques had been shown to perform well on small text corpora such as the Cranfield collection several thousand documents 7 Large scale retrieval systems such as the Lockheed Dialog system came into use early in the 1970s In 1992 the US Department of Defense along with the National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST cosponsored the Text Retrieval Conference TREC as part of the TIPSTER text program The aim of this was to look into the information retrieval community by supplying the infrastructure that was needed for evaluation of text retrieval methodologies on a very large text collection This catalyzed research on methods that scale to huge corpora The introduction of web search engines has boosted the need for very large scale retrieval systems even further Applications EditAreas where information retrieval techniques are employed include the entries are in alphabetical order within each category General applications Edit Digital libraries Information filtering Recommender systems Media search Blog search Image retrieval 3D retrieval Music retrieval News search Speech retrieval Video retrieval Search engines Site search Desktop search Enterprise search Federated search Mobile search Social search Web searchDomain specific applications Edit Expert search finding Genomic information retrieval Geographic information retrieval Information retrieval for chemical structures Information retrieval in software engineering Legal information retrieval Vertical searchOther retrieval methods Edit Methods Techniques in which information retrieval techniques are employed include Adversarial information retrieval Automatic summarization Multi document summarization Compound term processing Cross lingual retrieval Document classification Spam filtering Question answeringModel types Edit Categorization of IR models translated from German entry original source Dominik Kuropka For effectively retrieving relevant documents by IR strategies the documents are typically transformed into a suitable representation Each retrieval strategy incorporates a specific model for its document representation purposes The picture on the right illustrates the relationship of some common models In the picture the models are categorized according to two dimensions the mathematical basis and the properties of the model First dimension mathematical basis Edit Set theoretic models represent documents as sets of words or phrases Similarities are usually derived from set theoretic operations on those sets Common models are Standard Boolean model Extended Boolean model Fuzzy retrieval Algebraic models represent documents and queries usually as vectors matrices or tuples The similarity of the query vector and document vector is represented as a scalar value Vector space model Generalized vector space model Enhanced Topic based Vector Space Model Extended Boolean model Latent semantic indexing a k a latent semantic analysis Probabilistic models treat the process of document retrieval as a probabilistic inference Similarities are computed as probabilities that a document is relevant for a given query Probabilistic theorems like the Bayes theorem are often used in these models Binary Independence Model Probabilistic relevance model on which is based the okapi BM25 relevance function Uncertain inference Language models Divergence from randomness model Latent Dirichlet allocation Feature based retrieval models view documents as vectors of values of feature functions or just features and seek the best way to combine these features into a single relevance score typically by learning to rank methods Feature functions are arbitrary functions of document and query and as such can easily incorporate almost any other retrieval model as just another feature Second dimension properties of the model Edit Models without term interdependencies treat different terms words as independent This fact is usually represented in vector space models by the orthogonality assumption of term vectors or in probabilistic models by an independency assumption for term variables Models with immanent term interdependencies allow a representation of interdependencies between terms However the degree of the interdependency between two terms is defined by the model itself It is usually directly or indirectly derived e g by dimensional reduction from the co occurrence of those terms in the whole set of documents Models with transcendent term interdependencies allow a representation of interdependencies between terms but they do not allege how the interdependency between two terms is defined They rely an external source for the degree of interdependency between two terms For example a human or sophisticated algorithms Performance and correctness measures EditMain article Evaluation measures information retrieval The evaluation of an information retrieval system is the process of assessing how well a system meets the information needs of its users In general measurement considers a collection of documents to be searched and a search query Traditional evaluation metrics designed for Boolean retrieval clarification needed or top k retrieval include precision and recall All measures assume a ground truth notion of relevance every document is known to be either relevant or non relevant to a particular query In practice queries may be ill posed and there may be different shades of relevance Timeline EditBefore the 1900s 1801 Joseph Marie Jacquard invents the Jacquard loom the first machine to use punched cards to control a sequence of operations 1880s Herman Hollerith invents an electro mechanical data tabulator using punch cards as a machine readable medium 1890 Hollerith cards keypunches and tabulators used to process the 1890 US Census data 1920s 1930s Emanuel Goldberg submits patents for his Statistical Machine a document search engine that used photoelectric cells and pattern recognition to search the metadata on rolls of microfilmed documents 1940s 1950s late 1940s The US military confronted problems of indexing and retrieval of wartime scientific research documents captured from Germans 1945 Vannevar Bush s As We May Think appeared in Atlantic Monthly 1947 Hans Peter Luhn research engineer at IBM since 1941 began work on a mechanized punch card based system for searching chemical compounds dd 1950s Growing concern in the US for a science gap with the USSR motivated encouraged funding and provided a backdrop for mechanized literature searching systems Allen Kent et al and the invention of the citation index by Eugene Garfield 1950 The term information retrieval was coined by Calvin Mooers 10 1951 Philip Bagley conducted the earliest experiment in computerized document retrieval in a master thesis at MIT 11 1955 Allen Kent joined Case Western Reserve University and eventually became associate director of the Center for Documentation and Communications Research That same year Kent and colleagues published a paper in American Documentation describing the precision and recall measures as well as detailing a proposed framework for evaluating an IR system which included statistical sampling methods for determining the number of relevant documents not retrieved 12 1958 International Conference on Scientific Information Washington DC included consideration of IR systems as a solution to problems identified See Proceedings of the International Conference on Scientific Information 1958 National Academy of Sciences Washington DC 1959 1959 Hans Peter Luhn published Auto encoding of documents for information retrieval 1960s early 1960s Gerard Salton began work on IR at Harvard later moved to Cornell 1960 Melvin Earl Maron and John Lary Kuhns 13 published On relevance probabilistic indexing and information retrieval in the Journal of the ACM 7 3 216 244 July 1960 1962 Cyril W Cleverdon published early findings of the Cranfield studies developing a model for IR system evaluation See Cyril W Cleverdon Report on the Testing and Analysis of an Investigation into the Comparative Efficiency of Indexing Systems Cranfield Collection of Aeronautics Cranfield England 1962 Kent published Information Analysis and Retrieval 1963 Weinberg report Science Government and Information gave a full articulation of the idea of a crisis of scientific information The report was named after Dr Alvin Weinberg Joseph Becker and Robert M Hayes published text on information retrieval Becker Joseph Hayes Robert Mayo Information storage and retrieval tools elements theories New York Wiley 1963 1964 Karen Sparck Jones finished her thesis at Cambridge Synonymy and Semantic Classification and continued work on computational linguistics as it applies to IR The National Bureau of Standards sponsored a symposium titled Statistical Association Methods for Mechanized Documentation Several highly significant papers including G Salton s first published reference we believe to the SMART system mid 1960s National Library of Medicine developed MEDLARS Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System the first major machine readable database and batch retrieval system Project Intrex at MIT 1965 J C R Licklider published Libraries of the Future 1966 Don Swanson was involved in studies at University of Chicago on Requirements for Future Catalogs dd late 1960s F Wilfrid Lancaster completed evaluation studies of the MEDLARS system and published the first edition of his text on information retrieval 1968 Gerard Salton published Automatic Information Organization and Retrieval John W Sammon Jr s RADC Tech report Some Mathematics of Information Storage and Retrieval outlined the vector model 1969 Sammon s A nonlinear mapping for data structure analysis Archived 2017 08 08 at the Wayback Machine IEEE Transactions on Computers was the first proposal for visualization interface to an IR system dd 1970s early 1970s First online systems NLM s AIM TWX MEDLINE Lockheed s Dialog SDC s ORBIT Theodor Nelson promoting concept of hypertext published Computer Lib Dream Machines dd 1971 Nicholas Jardine and Cornelis J van Rijsbergen published The use of hierarchic clustering in information retrieval which articulated the cluster hypothesis 14 1975 Three highly influential publications by Salton fully articulated his vector processing framework and term discrimination model A Theory of Indexing Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics A Theory of Term Importance in Automatic Text Analysis JASIS v 26 A Vector Space Model for Automatic Indexing CACM 18 11 dd 1978 The First ACM SIGIR conference 1979 C J van Rijsbergen published Information Retrieval Butterworths Heavy emphasis on probabilistic models 1979 Tamas Doszkocs implemented the CITE natural language user interface for MEDLINE at the National Library of Medicine The CITE system supported free form query input ranked output and relevance feedback 15 1980s 1980 First international ACM SIGIR conference joint with British Computer Society IR group in Cambridge 1982 Nicholas J Belkin Robert N Oddy and Helen M Brooks proposed the ASK Anomalous State of Knowledge viewpoint for information retrieval This was an important concept though their automated analysis tool proved ultimately disappointing 1983 Salton and Michael J McGill published Introduction to Modern Information Retrieval McGraw Hill with heavy emphasis on vector models 1985 David Blair and Bill Maron publish An Evaluation of Retrieval Effectiveness for a Full Text Document Retrieval System mid 1980s Efforts to develop end user versions of commercial IR systems 1985 1993 Key papers on and experimental systems for visualization interfaces Work by Donald B Crouch Robert R Korfhage Matthew Chalmers Anselm Spoerri and others dd 1989 First World Wide Web proposals by Tim Berners Lee at CERN 1990s 1992 First TREC conference 1997 Publication of Korfhage s Information Storage and Retrieval 16 with emphasis on visualization and multi reference point systems 1999 Publication of Ricardo Baeza Yates and Berthier Ribeiro Neto s Modern Information Retrieval by Addison Wesley the first book that attempts to cover all IR late 1990s Web search engines implementation of many features formerly found only in experimental IR systems Search engines become the most common and maybe best instantiation of IR models Major conferences EditSIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval ECIR European Conference on Information Retrieval CIKM Conference on Information and Knowledge Management WWW International World Wide Web Conference WSDM Conference on Web Search and Data Mining ICTIR International Conference on Theory of Information RetrievalAwards in the field EditTony Kent Strix award Gerard Salton Award Karen Sparck Jones AwardSee also EditAdversarial information retrieval Information retrieval strategies in datasets Computer memory Device used on a computer for storing data Controlled vocabulary Method of organizing knowledge Cross language information retrieval Data mining Process of extracting and discovering patterns in large data sets European Summer School in Information Retrieval Human computer information retrieval HCIR Information extraction Machine reading of unstructured documents Information seeking Process or activity of attempting to obtain information in both human and technological contexts Information seeking Compared to information retrieval Collaborative information seeking Social information seeking Information Retrieval Facility Knowledge visualization Multimedia information retrieval Personal information management Tools and systems for managing one s own data Pearl growing Query understanding Relevance information retrieval Relevance feedback Rocchio classification Search engine indexing Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval Subject indexing Temporal information retrieval tf idf Number that reflects the importance of a word to a document in a corpus XML retrieval Web miningReferences Edit Luk R W P 2022 Why is information retrieval a scientific discipline Foundations of Science 27 2 427 453 doi 10 1007 s10699 020 09685 x S2CID 220506422 Jansen B J and Rieh S 2010 The Seventeen Theoretical Constructs of Information Searching and Information Retrieval Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Journal of the American Society for Information Sciences and Technology 61 8 1517 1534 Goodrum Abby A 2000 Image Information Retrieval An Overview of Current Research Informing Science 3 2 Foote Jonathan 1999 An overview of audio information retrieval Multimedia Systems 7 2 10 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 39 6339 doi 10 1007 s005300050106 S2CID 2000641 Beel Joran Gipp Bela Stiller Jan Olaf 2009 Information Retrieval On Mind Maps What Could It Be Good For Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Collaborative Computing Networking Applications and Worksharing CollaborateCom 09 Washington DC IEEE Archived from the original on 2011 05 13 Retrieved 2012 03 13 Frakes William B Baeza Yates Ricardo 1992 Information Retrieval Data Structures amp Algorithms Prentice Hall Inc ISBN 978 0 13 463837 9 Archived from the original on 2013 09 28 a b Singhal Amit 2001 Modern Information Retrieval A Brief Overview PDF Bulletin of the IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Data Engineering 24 4 35 43 Mark Sanderson amp W Bruce Croft 2012 The History of Information Retrieval Research Proceedings of the IEEE 100 1444 1451 doi 10 1109 jproc 2012 2189916 JE Holmstrom 1948 Section III Opening Plenary Session The Royal Society Scientific Information Conference 21 June 2 July 1948 Report and Papers Submitted 85 Mooers Calvin N The Theory of Digital Handling of Non numerical Information and its Implications to Machine Economics Zator Technical Bulletin No 48 cited in Fairthorne R A 1958 Automatic Retrieval of Recorded Information The Computer Journal 1 1 37 doi 10 1093 comjnl 1 1 36 Doyle Lauren Becker Joseph 1975 Information Retrieval and Processing Melville pp 410 pp ISBN 978 0 471 22151 7 Perry James W Kent Allen Berry Madeline M 1955 Machine literature searching X Machine language factors underlying its design and development American Documentation 6 4 242 254 doi 10 1002 asi 5090060411 Maron Melvin E 2008 An Historical Note on the Origins of Probabilistic Indexing PDF Information Processing and Management 44 2 971 972 doi 10 1016 j ipm 2007 02 012 N Jardine C J van Rijsbergen December 1971 The use of hierarchic clustering in information retrieval Information Storage and Retrieval 7 5 217 240 doi 10 1016 0020 0271 71 90051 9 Doszkocs T E amp Rapp B A 1979 Searching MEDLINE in English a Prototype User Interface with Natural Language Query Ranked Output and relevance feedback In Proceedings of the ASIS Annual Meeting 16 131 139 Korfhage Robert R 1997 Information Storage and Retrieval Wiley pp 368 pp ISBN 978 0 471 14338 3 Further reading EditRicardo Baeza Yates Berthier Ribeiro Neto Modern Information Retrieval The Concepts and Technology behind Search second edition Archived 2017 09 18 at the Wayback Machine Addison Wesley UK 2011 Stefan Buttcher Charles L A Clarke and Gordon V Cormack Information Retrieval Implementing and Evaluating Search Engines Archived 2020 10 05 at the Wayback Machine MIT Press Cambridge Massachusetts 2010 Information Retrieval System Library amp Information Science Network 24 April 2015 Christopher D Manning Prabhakar Raghavan and Hinrich Schutze Introduction to Information Retrieval Cambridge University Press 2008 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Information retrieval Wikimedia Commons has media related to Information retrieval ACM SIGIR Information Retrieval Special Interest Group BCS IRSG British Computer Society Information Retrieval Specialist Group Text Retrieval Conference TREC Forum for Information Retrieval Evaluation FIRE Information Retrieval online book by C J van Rijsbergen Information Retrieval Wiki Archived 2015 11 24 at the Wayback Machine Information Retrieval Facility Archived 2008 05 22 at the Wayback Machine Information Retrieval DUTH TREC report on information retrieval evaluation techniques How eBay measures search relevance Information retrieval performance evaluation tool Athena Research Centre Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Information retrieval amp oldid 1129301216, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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