The use of sampling, randomized algorithms, or training based on the unpredictable inputs of users in Information Retrieval often leads to non-deterministic outputs. Evaluating the effectiveness of systems incorporating these methods can be challenging since each run may produce different effectiveness scores. Current IR evaluation techniques do not address this problem. Using the context of distributed information retrieval as a case study for our investigation, we propose a solution based on multivariate linear modeling. We show that the approach provides a consistent and reliable method to compare the effectiveness of non-deterministic IR algorithms, and explain how statistics can safely be used to show that two IR algorithms have equivalent effectiveness. Copyright 2014 ACM.
History
Pagination
911-914
Location
Gold Coast, Qld.
Start date
2014-07-06
End date
2014-07-11
ISBN-13
9781450322591
Language
eng
Publication classification
E3 Extract of paper
Copyright notice
2014, ACM
Title of proceedings
Proceedings of the 37th International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval; SIGIR 2014
Event
ACM SIGIR Research and Development in Information Retrieval Conference (37th : 2014 : Gold Coast, Qld.)