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Implicit feedback for interactive information retrieval
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Volume 39 ,  Issue 1  (June 2005) table of contents
COLUMN: Dissertation abstracts table of contents
Pages: 70 - 70  
Year of Publication: 2005
ISSN:0163-5840
Author
Ryen W. White  University of Glasgow
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

Searchers can find the construction of query statements for submission to Information Retrieval (IR) systems a problematic activity. These problems are confounded by uncertainty about the information they are searching for, or an unfamiliarity with the retrieval system being used or collection being searched. On the World Wide Web these problems are potentially more acute as searchers receive little or no training in how to search effectively. Relevance feedback (RF) techniques allow searchers to directly communicate what information is relevant and help them construct improved query statements. However, the techniques require explicit relevance assessments that intrude on searchers' primary lines of activity and as such, searchers may be unwilling to provide this feedback. Implicit feedback systems are unobtrusive and make inferences of what is relevant based on searcher interaction. They gather information to better represent searcher needs whilst minimising the burden of explicitly reformulating queries or directly providing relevance information.