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Information retrieval



 
 
Information retrieval (IR) is the science of searching for documents, for information
Information

Information as a Conveyed concept has a diversity of meanings, from everyday usage to technical settings. Generally speaking, the concept of information is closely related to notions of constraint, communication, control system, data, form, instruction, knowledge, Meaning , stimulation, pattern, perception, and knowledge representation....
 within documents and for metadata about documents, as well as that of searching relational database
Relational database

A relational database is a database that groups data using common attributes found in the data set. The resulting "clumps" of organized data are much easier for people to understand....
s and the World Wide Web
World Wide Web

The World Wide Web is a very large set of interlinked hypertext documents accessed via the Internet. With a Web browser, one can view Web pages that may contain writing, s, videos, and other multimedia and navigate between them using hyperlinks....
. There is overlap in the usage of the terms data retrieval, document retrieval
Document retrieval

Document retrieval is defined as the matching of some stated user query against a set of free-text records. These records could be any type of mainly natural language, such as newspaper articles, real estate records or paragraphs in a manual....
, information retrieval, and text retrieval, but each also has its own body of literature, theory, praxis and technologies. IR is interdisciplinary, based on computer science
Computer science

Computer science is the study of the theoretical foundations of information and computation, and of practical techniques for their implementation and application in computer systems....
, mathematics
Mathematics

Mathematics is the study of quantity, structure, space, change, and related topics of pattern and form. Mathematicians seek out patterns whether found in numbers, space, natural science, computers, imaginary abstractions, or elsewhere....
, library science
Library science

Library science is an interdisciplinary field that applies the practices, perspectives, and tools of management, information technology, education, and other areas to library; the collection, organization, Preservation: Library and Archival Science and dissemination of information resources; and the political economy of information....
, information science
Information science

Information science is an interdisciplinarity science primarily concerned with the collection, Categorization, manipulation, storage, information retrieval and dissemination of information....
, information architecture
Information Architecture

Information architecture is the art of expressing a model or concept of information used in activities that require explicit details of complex systems....
, cognitive psychology
Cognitive psychology

Cognitive psychology is a branch of psychology that investigates internal mental processes such as problem solving, memory, and language.The school of thought arising from this approach is known as cognitivism which is interested in how people mentally represent information processing....
, linguistics
Linguistics

Linguistics is the science study of natural language. Linguistics encompasses a number of sub-fields. An important topical division is between the study of language structure and the study of Meaning ....
, statistics
Statistics

Statistics is a Mathematics pertaining to the collection, analysis, interpretation or explanation, and presentation of data. It also provides tools for prediction and forecasting based on data....
 and physics
Physics

Physics is the natural science which examines basic concepts such as energy, force, and spacetime and all that derives from these, such as mass, charge, matter and its Motion ....
.

Automated information retrieval systems are used to reduce what has been called "information overload
Information overload

Information overload refers to an excess amount of information being provided, making processing and absorbing tasks very difficult for the individual because sometimes we cannot see the validity behind the information ....
".






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Encyclopedia


Information retrieval (IR) is the science of searching for documents, for information
Information

Information as a Conveyed concept has a diversity of meanings, from everyday usage to technical settings. Generally speaking, the concept of information is closely related to notions of constraint, communication, control system, data, form, instruction, knowledge, Meaning , stimulation, pattern, perception, and knowledge representation....
 within documents and for metadata about documents, as well as that of searching relational database
Relational database

A relational database is a database that groups data using common attributes found in the data set. The resulting "clumps" of organized data are much easier for people to understand....
s and the World Wide Web
World Wide Web

The World Wide Web is a very large set of interlinked hypertext documents accessed via the Internet. With a Web browser, one can view Web pages that may contain writing, s, videos, and other multimedia and navigate between them using hyperlinks....
. There is overlap in the usage of the terms data retrieval, document retrieval
Document retrieval

Document retrieval is defined as the matching of some stated user query against a set of free-text records. These records could be any type of mainly natural language, such as newspaper articles, real estate records or paragraphs in a manual....
, information retrieval, and text retrieval, but each also has its own body of literature, theory, praxis and technologies. IR is interdisciplinary, based on computer science
Computer science

Computer science is the study of the theoretical foundations of information and computation, and of practical techniques for their implementation and application in computer systems....
, mathematics
Mathematics

Mathematics is the study of quantity, structure, space, change, and related topics of pattern and form. Mathematicians seek out patterns whether found in numbers, space, natural science, computers, imaginary abstractions, or elsewhere....
, library science
Library science

Library science is an interdisciplinary field that applies the practices, perspectives, and tools of management, information technology, education, and other areas to library; the collection, organization, Preservation: Library and Archival Science and dissemination of information resources; and the political economy of information....
, information science
Information science

Information science is an interdisciplinarity science primarily concerned with the collection, Categorization, manipulation, storage, information retrieval and dissemination of information....
, information architecture
Information Architecture

Information architecture is the art of expressing a model or concept of information used in activities that require explicit details of complex systems....
, cognitive psychology
Cognitive psychology

Cognitive psychology is a branch of psychology that investigates internal mental processes such as problem solving, memory, and language.The school of thought arising from this approach is known as cognitivism which is interested in how people mentally represent information processing....
, linguistics
Linguistics

Linguistics is the science study of natural language. Linguistics encompasses a number of sub-fields. An important topical division is between the study of language structure and the study of Meaning ....
, statistics
Statistics

Statistics is a Mathematics pertaining to the collection, analysis, interpretation or explanation, and presentation of data. It also provides tools for prediction and forecasting based on data....
 and physics
Physics

Physics is the natural science which examines basic concepts such as energy, force, and spacetime and all that derives from these, such as mass, charge, matter and its Motion ....
.

Automated information retrieval systems are used to reduce what has been called "information overload
Information overload

Information overload refers to an excess amount of information being provided, making processing and absorbing tasks very difficult for the individual because sometimes we cannot see the validity behind the information ....
". Many universities and public libraries
Public library

A public library is a library which is accessible by the public and is generally funded from public sources and may be operated by Civil services....
 use IR systems to provide access to books, journals and other documents. Web search engine
Web search engine

A Web search engine is a tool designed to search for information on the World Wide Web. The search results are usually presented in a list and are commonly called hits....
s are the most visible IR applications
Information retrieval applications

Areas where information retrieval techniques are employed include :...
.

History


The idea of using computers to search for relevant pieces of information was popularized in an article As We May Think by Vannevar Bush
Vannevar Bush

Vannevar Bush was an United States engineer and science administrator known for his work on analog computer, his political role in the development of the atomic bomb, and the idea of the memex, which was seen decades later as a pioneering concept for the World Wide Web....
 in 1945. First implementations of information retrieval systems were introduced in the 1950s and 1960s. By 1990 several different techniques had been shown to perform well on small text corpora (several thousand documents).

In 1992 the US Department of Defense, along with the National Institute of Standards and Technology
National Institute of Standards and Technology

The National Institute of Standards and Technology , known between 1901 and 1988 as the National Bureau of Standards , is a measurement standards laboratory which is a non-regulatory agency of the United States Department of Commerce....
 (NIST), cosponsored the Text Retrieval Conference
Text Retrieval Conference

The Text REtrieval Conference is an on-going series of workshops focusing on a list of different information retrieval research areas, or tracks. It is co-sponsored by the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the Disruptive Technology Office of the United States Department of Defense, and began in 1992 as part of the TIPS...
 (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
Scalability

In telecommunications and software engineering, scalability is a desirable property of a system, a network, or a process, which indicates its ability to either handle growing amounts of work in a graceful manner, or to be readily enlarged....
 to huge corpora. The introduction of web search engine
Web search engine

A Web search engine is a tool designed to search for information on the World Wide Web. The search results are usually presented in a list and are commonly called hits....
s has boosted the need for very large scale retrieval systems even further.

The use of digital methods for storing and retrieving information has led to the phenomenon of digital obsolescence
Digital obsolescence

Digital obsolescence is a situation where a digital resource is no longer readable because the physical media, the reader required to read the media, the hardware, or the software that runs on it, is no longer available....
, where a digital resource ceases to be readable because the physical media, the reader required to read the media, the hardware, or the software that runs on it, is no longer available. The information is initially easier to retrieve than if it were on paper, but is then effectively lost.

Timeline


  • Before 1900s
    1890: Hollerith tabulating machines were used to analyze the US census. (Herman Hollerith
    Herman Hollerith

    Herman Hollerith was a German-American statistician who developed a mechanical Tabulating machine based on punched cards in order to rapidly tabulate statistics from millions of pieces of data....
    ).
  • 1900s
    Late 1940s: The US military confronted problems of indexing and retrieval of wartime scientific research documents captured from Germans.
  • 1945: Vannevar Bush
    Vannevar Bush

    Vannevar Bush was an United States engineer and science administrator known for his work on analog computer, his political role in the development of the atomic bomb, and the idea of the memex, which was seen decades later as a pioneering concept for the World Wide Web....
    's As We May Think appeared in Atlantic Monthly
  • 1947: Hans Peter Luhn
    Hans Peter Luhn

    Hans Peter Luhn was a computer science for IBM, and creator of the Luhn algorithm and Key Word in Context indexing. He was awarded over 80 patents....
     (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 citation indexing (Eugene Garfield
    Eugene Garfield

    Eugene "Gene" Garfield is an United States scientist, one of the founders of bibliometrics and scientometrics. He received a PhD in Structural Linguistics from the University of Pennsylvania in 1961....
    ).
    1950: The term "information retrieval" may have been coined by Calvin Mooers
    Calvin Mooers

    Calvin Northrup Mooers , was an United States computer scientist known for his work in information retrieval and for the programming language TRAC programming language....
    .
    1951: Philip Bagley conducted the earliest experiment in computerized document retrieval in a master thesis at MIT.
    1955: Allen Kent joined Case Western Reserve University
    Case Western Reserve University

    Case Western Reserve University is a private research university located in Cleveland, Ohio, United States, with some residence halls on the south end of campus located in Cleveland Heights, Ohio....
    , and eventually becomes associate director of the Center for Documentation and Communications Research. That same year, Kent and colleagues publish a paper in American Documentation describing the precision and recall measures, as well as detailing a proposed "framework" for evaluating an IR system, which includes statistical sampling methods for determining the number of relevant documents not retrieved.
    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: at early 1960s Gerard Salton
    Gerard Salton

    Gerard Salton was a Professor of Computer Science at Cornell University. Salton was perhaps the leading computer scientist working in the field of information retrieval during his time....
     began work on IR at Harvard, later moved to Cornell.
    1960: Melvin Earl (Bill) Maron and J. L. Kuhns published "On relevance, probabilistic indexing, and information retrieval" in 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 Coll. 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
      Robert M. Hayes

      Robert M. Hayes is Professor Emeritus and former dean of the School of Library Service , now the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies at UCLA....
       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
      Computational linguistics

      Computational linguistics is an interdisciplinary field dealing with the Statistics and/or rule-based modeling of natural language from a computational perspective....
       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
    J. C. R. Licklider

    Joseph Carl Robnett Licklider , known simply as J.C.R. or "Lick" was an United States computer science, considered one of the most important figures in history of computer science and general history of computer hardware....
     published Libraries of the Future
  • 1966: Don Swanson was involved in studies at University of Chicago on Requirements for Future Catalogs
    late-1960s: F. W. 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.
    • J. W. Sammon'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" (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
      Hypertext

      Hypertext is text, displayed on a computer, with references to other text that the reader can immediately follow, usually by a mouse click or keypress sequence....
      , published Computer Lib/Dream Machines
      1971: N. Jardine and C. J. Van Rijsbergen
      C. J. van Rijsbergen

      C. J. "Keith" van Rijsbergen is a professor of computer science and the leader of the Glasgow Information Retrieval Group based at the University of Glasgow....
       published "The use of hierarchic clustering in information retrieval", which articulated the "cluster hypothesis." (Information Storage and Retrieval, 7(5), pp. 217-240, Dec 1971)
      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
      Association for Computing Machinery

      The Association for Computing Machinery, or ACM, was founded in 1947 as the world's first scientific and educational computing society. Its membership was approximately 83,000 as of 2007....
       SIGIR
      SIGIR

      SIGIR may refer to* Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction* Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval, a Special Interest Group of the Association for Computing Machinery concerned about information retrieval...
       conference.
      1979: C. J. Van Rijsbergen published Information Retrieval (Butterworths). Heavy emphasis on probabilistic models.
  • 1980s
    1980: First international ACM SIGIR conference, joint with British Computer Society IR group in Cambridge
    1982: Belkin
    Nicholas J. Belkin

    Nicholas J. Belkin is a professor at School of Communication, Information and Library Studies at Rutgers University. Among the main themes of his research are digital libraries; information-seeking behaviors; and interaction between humans and information retrieval systems....
    , Oddy, and 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 M. McGill) published Introduction to Modern Information Retrieval (McGraw-Hill), with heavy emphasis on vector models.
    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 D. B. Crouch, Robert R. Korfhage
    Robert R. Korfhage

    Robert Roy Korfhage was an american computer scientist, famous for his contributions to information retrieval and several textbooks.He was son of Dr....
    , M. Chalmers, A. Spoerri and others.
    1989: First World Wide Web
    World Wide Web

    The World Wide Web is a very large set of interlinked hypertext documents accessed via the Internet. With a Web browser, one can view Web pages that may contain writing, s, videos, and other multimedia and navigate between them using hyperlinks....
     proposals by Tim Berners-Lee
    Tim Berners-Lee

    Sir Timothy John Berners-Lee, Order of Merit, Order of the British Empire, Royal Society, Royal Academy of Engineering, Royal Society of Arts is an English people computer scientist and MIT professor credited with inventing the World Wide Web....
     at CERN
    CERN

    The European Organization for Nuclear Research , known as CERN , , is the world's largest particle physics laboratory, situated in the northwest suburbs of Geneva on the France-Switzerland border, established in 1954 in science....
    .
  • 1990s
    1992: First TREC conference.
    1997: Publication of Korfhage
    Robert R. Korfhage

    Robert Roy Korfhage was an american computer scientist, famous for his contributions to information retrieval and several textbooks.He was son of Dr....
    's Information Storage and Retrieval with emphasis on visualization and multi-reference point systems.
    late-1990s: Web search engines
    Web search engine

    A Web search engine is a tool designed to search for information on the World Wide Web. The search results are usually presented in a list and are commonly called hits....
     implementation of many features formerly found only in experimental IR systems. Search engines become the most common and maybe best instantiation of IR models, research and implementation.


Overview


An information retrieval process begins when a user 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 relevancy
Relevance

Relevance is a term used to describe how pertinent, connected, or applicable something is to a given matter. A thing is relevant if it serves as a means to a given purpose....
.

An object is an entity which keeps or stores information in a database. User queries are matched to objects stored in the database. Depending on the application
Information retrieval applications

Areas where information retrieval techniques are employed include :...
 the data objects may be, for example, text documents, images 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.

Most IR systems compute a numeric score on how well each object in the database match 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.

Performance measures


Many different measures for evaluating the performance of information retrieval systems have been proposed. The measures require a collection of documents and a query. All common measures described here assume a ground truth notion of relevancy: 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 relevancy.

Precision


Precision is the fraction of the documents retrieved that are relevant
Relevance (information retrieval)

In the context of information science and information retrieval, relevance denotes how well a retrieved set of documents meets the information need of the user....
 to the user's information need.

In binary classification
Binary classification

Binary classification is the task of Statistical classification the members of a given Set of objects into two groups on the basis of whether they have some property or not....
, precision is analogous to positive predictive value
Positive predictive value

The positive predictive value, or precision rate, or post-test probability of disease, is the proportion of patients with positive test results who are correctly diagnosed....
. Precision takes all retrieved documents into account. It can also be evaluated at a given cut-off rank, considering only the topmost results returned by the system. This measure is called precision at n or P@n.

Note that the meaning and usage of "precision" in the field of Information Retrieval differs from the definition of accuracy and precision
Accuracy and precision

In the fields of science, engineering, industry and statistics, accuracy is the degree of closeness of a Measure d or calculated quantity to its actual Value ....
 within other branches of science and technology.

Recall


Recall is the fraction of the documents that are relevant to the query that are successfully retrieved.

In binary classification, recall is called sensitivity. So it can be looked at as the probability that a relevant document is retrieved by the query.

It is trivial to achieve recall of 100% by returning all documents in response to any query. Therefore recall alone is not enough but one needs to measure the number of non-relevant documents also, for example by computing the precision.

Fall-Out

The proportion of non-relevant documents that are retrieved, out of all non-relevant documents available:

In binary classification, fall-out is closely related to specificity1-\mbox. It can be looked at as the probability that a non-relevant document is retrieved by the query.

It is trivial to achieve fall-out of 0% by returning zero documents in response to any query.

F-measure

The weighted harmonic mean
Harmonic mean

In mathematics, the harmonic mean is one of several kinds of average. Typically, it is appropriate for situations when the average of Rate s is desired....
 of precision and recall, the traditional F-measure or balanced F-score is:

This is also known as the measure, because recall and precision are evenly weighted.

The general formula for non-negative real ß is: .

Two other commonly used F measures are the measure, which weights recall twice as much as precision, and the measure, which weights precision twice as much as recall.

The F-measure was derived by van Rijsbergen (1979) so that "measures the effectiveness of retrieval with respect to a user who attaches ß times as much importance to recall as precision". It is based on van Rijsbergen's effectiveness measure . Their relationship is where .

Average precision of precision and recall


The precision and recall are based on the whole list of documents returned by the system. Average precision emphasizes returning more relevant documents earlier. It is average of precisions computed after truncating the list after each of the relevant documents in turn:

where r is the rank, N the number retrieved, rel a binary function on the relevance of a given rank, and P precision at a given cut-off rank.

Model types

Information Retrieval Models
For the information retrieval to be efficient, the documents are typically transformed into a suitable representation. There are several representations. 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

  • 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
      Standard Boolean model

      The Boolean model of information retrieval is a classical information retrieval model and, at the same time, the first and most adopted one. It is used by virtually all commercial IR systems today....
    • 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
      Vector space model

      Vector space model is an algebraic model for representing text documents as vector space of identifiers, such as, for example, index terms. It is used in information filtering, information retrieval, indexing and relevancy rankings....
    • Generalized vector space model
    • Topic-based vector space model (literature: , )
    • Extended Boolean model
    • Enhanced topic-based vector space model (literature: , )
    • Latent semantic indexing aka latent semantic analysis
      Latent semantic analysis

      Latent semantic analysis is a technique in natural language processing, in particular in vectorial semantics, of analyzing relationships between a set of documents and the terms they contain by producing a set of concepts related to the documents and terms....


  • 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
    Bayes' theorem

    In probability theory, Bayes' theorem relates the Conditional probability of two random events. It is often used to compute posterior probabilities given observations....
     are often used in these models.
    • Binary independence retrieval
    • Probabilistic relevance model (BM25)
    • Uncertain inference
    • Language model
      Language model

      A statistical language model assigns a probability to a sequence of m words by means of a probability distribution.Language modeling is used in many natural language processing applications such as speech recognition, machine translation, part-of-speech tagging, parsing and information retrieval....
      s
    • Divergence-from-randomness model
    • Latent Dirichlet allocation
      Latent Dirichlet allocation

      In statistics, latent Dirichlet allocation is a generative model that allows sets of observations to be explained by Latent variable groups which explain why some parts of the data are similar....


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
    Orthogonality

    In mathematics, two vectors are orthogonal if they are perpendicular, i.e., they form a right angle. The word comes from the Greek language ' , meaning "straight", and ' , meaning "angle"....
     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

Major figures


  • Thomas Bayes
    Thomas Bayes

    Thomas Bayes was a Kingdom of Great Britain mathematician and Presbyterian minister, known for having formulated a specific case of the theorem that bears his name: Bayes' theorem, which was published posthumously....
  • Claude E. Shannon
  • Gerard Salton
    Gerard Salton

    Gerard Salton was a Professor of Computer Science at Cornell University. Salton was perhaps the leading computer scientist working in the field of information retrieval during his time....
  • Hans Peter Luhn
    Hans Peter Luhn

    Hans Peter Luhn was a computer science for IBM, and creator of the Luhn algorithm and Key Word in Context indexing. He was awarded over 80 patents....
  • Karen Spärck Jones
    Karen Spärck Jones

    Karen Sp?rck Jones Fellow of the British Academy was a United Kingdom computer scientist.Karen Sp?rck Jones was born in Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England....
  • C. J. van Rijsbergen
    C. J. van Rijsbergen

    C. J. "Keith" van Rijsbergen is a professor of computer science and the leader of the Glasgow Information Retrieval Group based at the University of Glasgow....
  • Martin Porter
    Martin Porter

    Dr. Martin F. Porter is the inventor of the Porter Stemming and the Snowball programming language programming framework.The Muscat search engine comes from research performed by Dr Porter at Cambridge University , and was commercialized in 1984 by Cambridge CD Publishing; it was subsequently sold to MAID which became the Dialog ....


Awards in the field


  • Tony Kent Strix award
    Tony Kent Strix award

    The Strix award is an annual award for outstanding contributions to the field of information retrieval.The award has been presented since 1998 in memory of Dr Tony Kent, a past Fellow of the Institute of Information Scientists , who died in 1997....
  • Gerard Salton Award
    Gerard Salton Award

    The Gerard Salton Award is presented by the Association for Computing Machinery SIGIR every three years to an individual who has made "significant, sustained and continuing contributions to research in information retrieval"....


See also

  • Adversarial information retrieval
    Adversarial information retrieval

    Adversarial information retrieval is a topic in information retrieval that addresses tasks such as gathering, indexing, filtering, retrieving and ranking information from collections wherein a subset has been manipulated maliciously....
  • Areas of IR application
    Information retrieval applications

    Areas where information retrieval techniques are employed include :...
  • Clustering
    Clustering

    Clustering can refer to the following:In information technology:* Forming a computer cluster - the connection of many computers to be used as one larger computer....
  • Compound term processing
    Compound term processing

    Compound term processing is the name that is used for a category of techniques in Information retrieval applications that performs matching on the basis of compound terms....
  • Controlled vocabulary
    Controlled vocabulary

    Controlled vocabularies provide a way to organize knowledge for subsequent retrieval. They are used in subject indexing schemes, subject headings, thesauri and taxonomies....
  • Cross-language information retrieval
  • Educational psychology
    Educational psychology

    Educational psychology is the study of how humans learn in educational settings, the effectiveness of educational interventions, the psychology of teaching, and the social psychology of schools as organizations....
  • Free text search
  • Human Computer Information Retrieval
    Human Computer Information Retrieval

    The fields of human computer interaction and information retrieval have both developed innovative techniques to address the challenge of navigating the complex information spaces, but their insights have to date often failed to cross disciplinary borders....
  • Information extraction
    Information extraction

    In natural language processing, information extraction is a type of information retrieval whose goal is to automatically extract structured information, i.e....
  • Information need
  • Information Retrieval Facility
    Information Retrieval Facility

    The Information Retrieval Facility , founded 2006 and located in Vienna, Austria, is a research platform for networking and collaboration for professionals in the field of information retrieval....
  • Information science
    Information science

    Information science is an interdisciplinarity science primarily concerned with the collection, Categorization, manipulation, storage, information retrieval and dissemination of information....
  • Knowledge visualization
  • Multisearch
    Multisearch

    Multisearch is a computer multitasking search engine which includes both search engine and metasearch engine characteristics with additional capability of retrieval of search result sets that were previously classified by users....
  • Personal information management
    Personal information management

    Personal information management refers to both the practice and the study of the activities people perform in order to acquire, organize, maintain, retrieve and use information items such as documents , web pages and email messages for everyday use to complete tasks and fulfill a person?s various roles ....
  • Relevance (Information Retrieval)
    Relevance (information retrieval)

    In the context of information science and information retrieval, relevance denotes how well a retrieved set of documents meets the information need of the user....
  • Relevance feedback
    Relevance feedback

    Relevance feedback is a feature of some information retrieval systems. The idea behind relevance feedback is to take the results that are initially returned from a given query and to use information about whether or not those results are relevant to perform a new query....
  • Subject indexing
    Subject indexing

    Subject indexing is the act of describing a document by keyword to indicate what the document is about or to summarize its content . Indices are constructed, separately, on three distinct levels: terms in a document such as a book; objects in a collection such as a library; and documents within a field of knowledge....
  • Search index
    Index (search engine)

    Search engine index collects, parses, and stores data to facilitate fast and accurate information retrieval. Index design incorporates interdisciplinary concepts from linguistics, cognitive psychology, mathematics, informatics, physics and computer science....
  • Selection-based search
    Selection-based search

    A selection-based search system is a search engine system in which the user invokes a search query using only the mouse. A selection-based search system allows the user to search the internet for more information about any Keyword or phrase contained within a document or webpage in any software application on his desktop computer using the...
  • Tf-idf


External links

  • (online book) by C. J. van Rijsbergen
    C. J. van Rijsbergen

    C. J. "Keith" van Rijsbergen is a professor of computer science and the leader of the Glasgow Information Retrieval Group based at the University of Glasgow....