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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 of searching for information in a document, searching for documents themselves, and also searching for the
metadata Metadata is "data that provides information about other data", but not the content of the data, such as the text of a message or the image itself. There are many distinct types of metadata, including: * Descriptive metadata – the descriptive ...
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 Information overload (also known as infobesity, infoxication, information anxiety, and information explosion) is the difficulty in understanding an issue and effectively making decisions when one has too much information (TMI) about that issue, ...
. 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. Depending on the
application Application may refer to: Mathematics and computing * Application software, computer software designed to help the user to perform specific tasks ** Application layer, an abstraction layer that specifies protocols and interface methods used in a c ...
the data objects may be, for example, text documents, images, audio, mind maps 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 Metadata is "data that provides information about other data", but not the content of the data, such as the text of a message or the image itself. There are many distinct types of metadata, including: * Descriptive metadata – the descriptive ...
. 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.


History

The idea of using computers to search for relevant pieces of information was popularized in the article ''
As We May Think "As We May Think" is a 1945 essay by Vannevar Bush which has been described as visionary and influential, anticipating many aspects of information society. It was first published in ''The Atlantic'' in July 1945 and republished in an abridged v ...
'' by Vannevar Bush in 1945. 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. The first description of a computer searching for information was described by Holmstrom in 1948, 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). 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 Scale or scales may refer to: Mathematics * Scale (descriptive set theory), an object defined on a set of points * Scale (ratio), the ratio of a linear dimension of a model to the corresponding dimension of the original * Scale factor, a number ...
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

* Digital libraries * Information filtering ** Recommender systems * Media search ** Blog search ** Image retrieval **
3D retrieval A 3D Content Retrieval system is a computer system for browsing, searching and retrieving three dimensional digital contents (e.g.: Computer-aided design, molecular biology models, and cultural heritage 3D scenes, etc.) from a large database of di ...
** Music retrieval ** News search ** Speech retrieval **
Video retrieval A video search engine is a web-based search engine which crawls the web for video content. Some video search engines parse externally hosted content while others allow content to be uploaded and hosted on their own servers. Some engines also allow ...
* Search engines **
Site search Site most often refers to: * Archaeological site * Campsite, a place used for overnight stay in an outdoor area * Construction site * Location, a point or an area on the Earth's surface or elsewhere * Website, a set of related web pages, typical ...
** Desktop search ** Enterprise search **
Federated search Federated search retrieves information from a variety of sources via a search application built on top of one or more search engines. A user makes a single query request which is distributed to the search engines, databases or other query engines ...
** Mobile search ** Social search ** Web search


Domain-specific applications

* Expert search finding * Genomic information retrieval * Geographic information retrieval * Information retrieval for chemical structures * Information retrieval in software engineering * Legal information retrieval * Vertical search


Other retrieval methods

Methods/Techniques in which information retrieval techniques are employed include: * Adversarial information retrieval *
Automatic summarization Automatic summarization is the process of shortening a set of data computationally, to create a subset (a summary) that represents the most important or relevant information within the original content. Artificial intelligence algorithms are commo ...
** Multi-document summarization * Compound term processing * Cross-lingual retrieval * Document classification * Spam filtering *
Question answering Question answering (QA) is a computer science discipline within the fields of information retrieval and natural language processing (NLP), which is concerned with building systems that automatically answer questions posed by humans in a natural l ...


Model types

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

* ''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 The (standard) Boolean model of information retrieval (BIR) is a classical information retrieval (IR) model and, at the same time, the first and most-adopted one. It is used by many IR systems to this day. The BIR is based on Boolean logic and clas ...
**
Extended Boolean model The Extended Boolean model was described in a Communications of the ACM article appearing in 1983, by Gerard Salton, Edward A. Fox, and Harry Wu. The goal of the Extended Boolean model is to overcome the drawbacks of the Boolean model that has been ...
**
Fuzzy retrieval Fuzzy retrieval techniques are based on the Extended Boolean model and the Fuzzy set theory. There are two classical fuzzy retrieval models: Mixed Min and Max (MMM) and the Paice model. Both models do not provide a way of evaluating query weights, ...
* ''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 The Extended Boolean model was described in a Communications of the ACM article appearing in 1983, by Gerard Salton, Edward A. Fox, and Harry Wu. The goal of the Extended Boolean model is to overcome the drawbacks of the Boolean model that has been ...
** 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 In probability theory and statistics, Bayes' theorem (alternatively Bayes' law or Bayes' rule), named after Thomas Bayes, describes the probability of an event, based on prior knowledge of conditions that might be related to the event. For examp ...
are often used in these models. **
Binary Independence Model The Binary Independence Model (BIM) in computing and information science is a probabilistic information retrieval technique. The model makes some simple assumptions to make the estimation of document/query similarity probable and feasible. Defini ...
**
Probabilistic relevance model The probabilistic relevance model was devised by Stephen E. Robertson and Karen Spärck Jones as a framework for probabilistic models to come. It is a formalism of information retrieval useful to derive ranking functions used by search engine ...
on which is based the okapi (BM25) relevance function ** Uncertain inference **
Language model A language model is a probability distribution over sequences of words. Given any sequence of words of length , a language model assigns a probability P(w_1,\ldots,w_m) to the whole sequence. Language models generate probabilities by training on ...
s ** 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

* ''Models without term-interdependencies'' treat different terms/words as independent. This fact is usually represented in vector space models by the
orthogonality In mathematics, orthogonality is the generalization of the geometric notion of ''perpendicularity''. By extension, orthogonality is also used to refer to the separation of specific features of a system. The term also has specialized meanings in ...
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 Dimensional reduction is the limit of a compactified theory where the size of the compact dimension goes to zero. In physics, a theory in ''D'' spacetime dimensions can be redefined in a lower number of dimensions ''d'', by taking all the fields ...
) 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 or top-k retrieval, include
precision and recall In pattern recognition, information retrieval, object detection and classification (machine learning), precision and recall are performance metrics that apply to data retrieved from a collection, corpus or sample space. Precision (also called ...
. 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 Joseph Marie Charles ''dit'' (called or nicknamed) Jacquard (; 7 July 1752 – 7 August 1834) was a French weaver and merchant. He played an important role in the development of the earliest programmable loom (the " Jacquard loom"), which in tu ...
invents the
Jacquard loom The Jacquard machine () is a device fitted to a loom that simplifies the process of manufacturing textiles with such complex patterns as brocade, damask and matelassé. The resulting ensemble of the loom and Jacquard machine is then called a Ja ...
, 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 The United States census of 1890 was taken beginning June 2, 1890, but most of the 1890 census materials were destroyed in 1921 when a building caught fire and in the subsequent disposal of the remaining damaged records. It determined the reside ...
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 "As We May Think" is a 1945 essay by Vannevar Bush which has been described as visionary and influential, anticipating many aspects of information society. It was first published in ''The Atlantic'' in July 1945 and republished in an abridged v ...
'' appeared in ''
Atlantic Monthly ''The Atlantic'' is an American magazine and multi-platform publisher. It features articles in the fields of politics, foreign affairs, business and the economy, culture and the arts, technology, and science. It was founded in 1857 in Boston, ...
''. *:: 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. *: 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 (CWRU) is a private research university in Cleveland, Ohio. Case Western Reserve was established in 1967, when Western Reserve University, founded in 1826 and named for its location in the Connecticut Western Reser ...
, 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. *: 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 Melvin Earl "Bill" Maron (Jan 23, 1924 - September 28, 2016) was an American computer scientist and emeritis professor of University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) ...
and John Lary Kuhns published "On relevance, probabilistic indexing, and information retrieval" in the Journal of the ACM 7(3):216–244, July 1960. *: 1962: *:*
Cyril W. Cleverdon Cyril Cleverdon (9 September 1914 – 4 December 1997) was a British librarian and computer scientist who is best known for his work on the evaluation of information retrieval systems. Cyril Cleverdon was born in Bristol, England. He worked at ...
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 Alvin Martin Weinberg (; April 20, 1915 – October 18, 2006) was an American nuclear physicist who was the administrator at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) during and after the Manhattan Project. He came to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, in 1945 ...
. *:* Joseph Becker and
Robert M. Hayes Robert or Bob Hayes may refer to: * Bob Hayes (1942–2002), Olympic gold-medal sprinter and receiver for the Dallas Cowboys * Robert Hayes (legal scholar) (1942–2011), Australian law scholar * Robert M. Hayes (information scientist) (born 1926) ...
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 is an Interdisciplinarity, interdisciplinary field concerned with the computational modelling of natural language, as well as the study of appropriate computational approaches to linguistic questions. In general, comput ...
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 MEDLINE (Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online, or MEDLARS Online) is a bibliographic database of life sciences and biomedical information. It includes bibliographic information for articles from academic journals covering medic ...
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 Don R. Swanson (October 10, 1924 – November 18, 2012) was an American information scientist, most known for his work in literature-based discovery in the biomedical domain. His particular method has been used as a model for further work, and i ...
was involved in studies at University of Chicago on Requirements for Future Catalogs. *: late 1960s:
F. Wilfrid Lancaster Frederick Wilfrid ("Wilf") Lancaster (September 4, 1933 – August 25, 2013) was a British-American information scientist. He immigrated to the USA in 1959 and worked as information specialist for the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryl ...
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
" (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 is E-text, text displayed on a computer display or other electronic devices with references (hyperlinks) to other text that the reader can immediately access. Hypertext documents are interconnected by hyperlinks, which are typi ...
, published ''Computer Lib/Dream Machines''. *: 1971:
Nicholas Jardine Nicholas Jardine FBA (born 4 September 1943) is a British mathematician, philosopher of science and its history, historian of astronomy and natural history, and amateur mycologist. He is Emeritus Professor at the Department of History and Philoso ...
and
Cornelis J. van Rijsbergen C. J. "Keith" van Rijsbergen FREng (Cornelis Joost van Rijsbergen; born 1943) is a professor of computer science at the University of Glasgow, where he founded the Glasgow Information Retrieval Group. He is one of the founders of modern Info ...
published "The use of
hierarchic clustering A hierarchy (from Greek: , from , 'president of sacred rites') is an arrangement of items (objects, names, values, categories, etc.) that are represented as being "above", "below", or "at the same level as" one another. Hierarchy is an important ...
in information retrieval", which articulated the "cluster hypothesis." *: 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 ACM or A.C.M. may refer to: Aviation * AGM-129 ACM, 1990–2012 USAF cruise missile * Air chief marshal * Air combat manoeuvring or dogfighting * Air cycle machine * Arica Airport (Colombia) (IATA: ACM), in Arica, Amazonas, Colombia Computing * ...
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.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. * 1980s *: 1980: First international ACM SIGIR conference, joint with British Computer Society IR group in Cambridge. *: 1982:
Nicholas J. Belkin Nicholas J. Belkin is a professor at the School of Communication and Information at Rutgers University. Among the main themes of his research are digital libraries; information-seeking behaviors; and interaction between humans and information r ...
, 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 Melvin Earl "Bill" Maron (Jan 23, 1924 - September 28, 2016) was an American computer scientist and emeritis professor of University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) ...
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 Donald is a masculine given name derived from the Gaelic name ''Dòmhnall''.. This comes from the Proto-Celtic *''Dumno-ualos'' ("world-ruler" or "world-wielder"). The final -''d'' in ''Donald'' is partly derived from a misinterpretation of the ...
,
Robert R. Korfhage Robert Roy Korfhage (December 2, 1930 – November 20, 1998) was an American computer scientist, famous for his contributions to information retrieval and several textbooks. He was son of Dr. Roy Korfhage who was a chemist at Nestlé in Fulton, ...
, Matthew Chalmers, Anselm Spoerri and others. *: 1989: First World Wide Web proposals by
Tim Berners-Lee Sir Timothy John Berners-Lee (born 8 June 1955), also known as TimBL, is an English computer scientist best known as the inventor of the World Wide Web. He is a Professorial Fellow of Computer Science at the University of Oxford and a profess ...
at
CERN The European Organization for Nuclear Research, known as CERN (; ; ), is an intergovernmental organization that operates the largest particle physics laboratory in the world. Established in 1954, it is based in a northwestern suburb of Gene ...
. * 1990s *: 1992: First
TREC TREC may refer to: * Techniques de Randonnée Équestre de Compétition or Trec, an equestrian discipline * Text Retrieval Conference, workshops co-sponsored by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the U.S. Department of ...
conference. *: 1997: Publication of Korfhage's ''Information Storage and Retrieval'' 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

* SIGIR
Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval
* ECIR:
European Conference on Information Retrieval The European Conference on Information Retrieval (ECIR) is the main European research conference for the presentation of new results in the field of information retrieval (IR). It is organized by the Information Retrieval Specialist Group of the Br ...
* CIKM:
Conference on Information and Knowledge Management The ACM Conference on Information and Knowledge Management (CIKM, pronounced ) is an annual computer science research conference dedicated to information management (IM) and knowledge management (KM). Since the first event in 1992, the conference ...
* WWW: International World Wide Web Conference * WSDM
Conference on Web Search and Data Mining
* ICTIR
International Conference on Theory of Information Retrieval


Awards in the field

* Tony Kent Strix award *
Gerard Salton Award The Gerard Salton Award is presented by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval (SIGIR) every three years to an individual who has made "significant, sustained and continuing contributions to re ...
*
Karen Spärck Jones Award To commemorate the achievements of Karen Spärck Jones, the Karen Spärck Jones Award was created in 2008 by the British Computer Society (BCS) and its Information Retrieval Specialist Group (BCS IRSG), which is sponsored by Microsoft Research. T ...


See also

* * * * * * * * * ** ** ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


References


Further reading

* Ricardo Baeza-Yates, Berthier Ribeiro-Neto
Modern Information Retrieval: The Concepts and Technology behind Search (second edition)
. Addison-Wesley, UK, 2011. * Stefan Büttcher, Charles L. A. Clarke, and Gordon V. Cormack
Information Retrieval: Implementing and Evaluating Search Engines
. MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2010. * * Christopher D. Manning, Prabhakar Raghavan, and Hinrich Schütze
Introduction to Information Retrieval
Cambridge University Press, 2008.


External links


ACM SIGIR: Information Retrieval Special Interest GroupBCS IRSG: British Computer Society - Information Retrieval Specialist GroupText Retrieval Conference (TREC)Forum for Information Retrieval Evaluation (FIRE)
(online book) by
C. J. van Rijsbergen C. J. "Keith" van Rijsbergen FREng (Cornelis Joost van Rijsbergen; born 1943) is a professor of computer science at the University of Glasgow, where he founded the Glasgow Information Retrieval Group. He is one of the founders of modern Info ...

Information Retrieval Wiki

Information Retrieval Facility

Information Retrieval @ DUTHTREC report on information retrieval evaluation techniquesHow eBay measures search relevanceInformation retrieval performance evaluation tool @ Athena Research Centre
{{DEFAULTSORT:Information Retrieval Natural language processing