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Exploring fact‐focused relevance and novelty detection

Jahna Otterbacher (Department of Public and Business Administration, University of Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus)
Dragomir Radev (School of Information, Departments of EECS and Linguistics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA)

Journal of Documentation

ISSN: 0022-0418

Article publication date: 25 July 2008

456

Abstract

Purpose

Automated sentence‐level relevance and novelty detection would be of direct benefit to many information retrieval systems. However, the low level of agreement between human judges performing the task is an issue of concern. In previous approaches, annotators were asked to identify sentences in a document set that are relevant to a given topic, and then to eliminate sentences that do not provide novel information. This paper aims to explore a new approach in which relevance and novelty judgments are made within the context of specific, factual information needs, rather than with respect to a broad topic.

Design/methodology/approach

An experiment is conducted in which annotators perform the novelty detection task in both the topic‐focused and fact‐focused settings.

Findings

Higher levels of agreement between judges are found on the task of identifying relevant sentences in the fact‐focused approach. However, the new approach does not improve agreement on novelty judgments.

Originality/value

The analysis confirms the intuition that making sentence‐level relevance judgments is likely to be the more difficult of the two tasks in the novelty detection framework.

Keywords

Citation

Otterbacher, J. and Radev, D. (2008), "Exploring fact‐focused relevance and novelty detection", Journal of Documentation, Vol. 64 No. 4, pp. 496-510. https://doi.org/10.1108/00220410810884057

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2008, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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