2011
Conference article  Open Access

Caching query-biased snippets for efficient retrieval

Lucchese C., Perego R., Ceccarelli D., Silvestri F., Orlando S.

Information retrieval 

Web Search Engines' result pages contain references to the top-k documents relevant for the query submitted by a user. Each document is represented by a title, a snippet and a URL. Snippets, i.e. short sentences showing the portions of the document being relevant to the query, help users to select the most interesting results. The snippet generation process is very expensive, since it may require to access a number of documents for each issued query. We assert that caching, a popular technique used to enhance performance at various levels of any computing systems, can be very e ective in this context. We design and experiment several cache organizations, and we introduce the concept of supersnippet, that is the set of sentences in a document that are more likely to answer future queries. We show that supersnippets can be built by exploiting query logs, and that in our experiments a supersnippet cache answers up to 62% of the requests, remarkably outperforming other caching approaches.

Source: 14th International Conference on Extending Database Technology, EDBT/ICDT '11, pp. 93–104, Uppsala, Sweden, March 21-24 2011

Publisher: ACM Press, New York, USA


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BibTeX entry
@inproceedings{oai:it.cnr:prodotti:199719,
	title = {Caching query-biased snippets for efficient retrieval},
	author = {Lucchese C. and Perego R. and Ceccarelli D. and Silvestri F. and Orlando S.},
	publisher = {ACM Press, New York, USA},
	doi = {10.1145/1951365.1951379},
	booktitle = {14th International Conference on Extending Database Technology, EDBT/ICDT '11, pp. 93–104, Uppsala, Sweden, March 21-24 2011},
	year = {2011}
}

ASSETS
Advanced Search Services and Enhanced Technological Solutions for the European Digital Library