Preliminary experiments using subjective logic for the polyrepresentation of information needs

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Preliminary experiments using subjective logic for the polyrepresentation of information needs. / Lioma, Christina; Larsen, Birger; Ingwersen, Peter.

Proceedings of the 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium. Association for Computing Machinery, 2012. p. 174-183.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lioma, C, Larsen, B & Ingwersen, P 2012, Preliminary experiments using subjective logic for the polyrepresentation of information needs. in Proceedings of the 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium. Association for Computing Machinery, pp. 174-183, 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium, Nijmegen, Netherlands, 21/08/2012. https://doi.org/10.1145/2362724.2362755

APA

Lioma, C., Larsen, B., & Ingwersen, P. (2012). Preliminary experiments using subjective logic for the polyrepresentation of information needs. In Proceedings of the 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium (pp. 174-183). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/2362724.2362755

Vancouver

Lioma C, Larsen B, Ingwersen P. Preliminary experiments using subjective logic for the polyrepresentation of information needs. In Proceedings of the 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium. Association for Computing Machinery. 2012. p. 174-183 https://doi.org/10.1145/2362724.2362755

Author

Lioma, Christina ; Larsen, Birger ; Ingwersen, Peter. / Preliminary experiments using subjective logic for the polyrepresentation of information needs. Proceedings of the 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium. Association for Computing Machinery, 2012. pp. 174-183

Bibtex

@inbook{e6de02b191384fe794686a8c30ca30d4,
title = "Preliminary experiments using subjective logic for the polyrepresentation of information needs",
abstract = "According to the principle of polyrepresentation, retrieval accuracy may improve through the combination of multiple and diverse information object representations about e.g. the context of the user, the information sought, or the retrieval system [9, 10]. Recently, the principle of polyrep-resentation was mathematically expressed using subjective logic [12], where the potential suitability of each representation for improving retrieval performance was formalised through degrees of belief and uncertainty [15]. No experimental evidence or practical application has so far validated this model. We extend the work of Lioma et al. (2010) [15], by providing a practical application and analysis of the model. We show how to map the notions of belief and uncertainty to real-life evidence drawn from a retrieval dataset. We also show how to estimate two different types of polyrep-resentation assuming either (a) independence or (b) dependence between the information objects that are combined. We focus on the polyrepresentation of different types of context relating to user information needs (i.e. work task, user background knowledge, ideal answer) and show that the subjective logic model can predict their optimal combination prior and independently to the retrieval process.",
author = "Christina Lioma and Birger Larsen and Peter Ingwersen",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1145/2362724.2362755",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-1-4503-1282-0",
pages = "174--183",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium",
publisher = "Association for Computing Machinery",
note = "4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium, IIIX '12 ; Conference date: 21-08-2012 Through 24-08-2012",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Preliminary experiments using subjective logic for the polyrepresentation of information needs

AU - Lioma, Christina

AU - Larsen, Birger

AU - Ingwersen, Peter

N1 - Conference code: 4

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - According to the principle of polyrepresentation, retrieval accuracy may improve through the combination of multiple and diverse information object representations about e.g. the context of the user, the information sought, or the retrieval system [9, 10]. Recently, the principle of polyrep-resentation was mathematically expressed using subjective logic [12], where the potential suitability of each representation for improving retrieval performance was formalised through degrees of belief and uncertainty [15]. No experimental evidence or practical application has so far validated this model. We extend the work of Lioma et al. (2010) [15], by providing a practical application and analysis of the model. We show how to map the notions of belief and uncertainty to real-life evidence drawn from a retrieval dataset. We also show how to estimate two different types of polyrep-resentation assuming either (a) independence or (b) dependence between the information objects that are combined. We focus on the polyrepresentation of different types of context relating to user information needs (i.e. work task, user background knowledge, ideal answer) and show that the subjective logic model can predict their optimal combination prior and independently to the retrieval process.

AB - According to the principle of polyrepresentation, retrieval accuracy may improve through the combination of multiple and diverse information object representations about e.g. the context of the user, the information sought, or the retrieval system [9, 10]. Recently, the principle of polyrep-resentation was mathematically expressed using subjective logic [12], where the potential suitability of each representation for improving retrieval performance was formalised through degrees of belief and uncertainty [15]. No experimental evidence or practical application has so far validated this model. We extend the work of Lioma et al. (2010) [15], by providing a practical application and analysis of the model. We show how to map the notions of belief and uncertainty to real-life evidence drawn from a retrieval dataset. We also show how to estimate two different types of polyrep-resentation assuming either (a) independence or (b) dependence between the information objects that are combined. We focus on the polyrepresentation of different types of context relating to user information needs (i.e. work task, user background knowledge, ideal answer) and show that the subjective logic model can predict their optimal combination prior and independently to the retrieval process.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84867476987&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1145/2362724.2362755

DO - 10.1145/2362724.2362755

M3 - Book chapter

AN - SCOPUS:84867476987

SN - 978-1-4503-1282-0

SP - 174

EP - 183

BT - Proceedings of the 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium

PB - Association for Computing Machinery

T2 - 4th Information Interaction in Context Symposium

Y2 - 21 August 2012 through 24 August 2012

ER -

ID: 49502447