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2011 Journal article Restricted
Discovering Europeana Users' Search Behavior
Ceccarelli D., Gordea S., Lucchese C., Nardini F. M., Perego R. Tolomei G.
Europeana is a strategic project funded by the European Commission with the goal of making Europe's cultural and scientific heritage accessible to the public. ASSETS is a two-year Best Practice Network co-funded by the CIP PSP Programme to improve performance, accessibility and usability of the Europeana search engine. Here we present a characterization of the Europeana logs by showing statistics on common behavioral patterns of the Europeana users.Source: ERCIM news 86 (2011): 39–40.

See at: ercim-news.ercim.eu Restricted | CNR ExploRA


2011 Conference article Open Access OPEN
A search architecture enabling efficient diversification of search results
Capannini G., Nardini F. M., Perego R., Silvestri F.
In this paper, we deal with efficiency of the diversification of results returned by Web Search Engines (WSEs). We extend a search architecture based on additive Machine Learned Ranking (MLR) systems with a new module computing the diversity score of each retrieved document. Our proposed solution is designed to be used with other techniques, (e.g. early termination of rank computation, etc.). Furthermore, we use an efficient state-of-the-art diversification approach based on knowledge extracted from query logs, and prove that it can efficiently works in a additive machine learned ranking system, and we study its feasibility.Source: Diversity in Document Retrieval Workshop, DDR-2011, pp. 42–46, Dublin, 18th April 2011

See at: ISTI Repository Open Access | www.dcs.gla.ac.uk Open Access | CNR ExploRA


2011 Contribution to conference Restricted
Efficient diversification of search results using query logs
Capannini G., Nardini F. M., Perego R., Silvestri F.
We study the problem of diversifying search results by exploiting the knowledge mined from query logs. Our proposal exploits the presence of different ``specializations'' of queries in query logs to detect the submission of ambiguous/faceted queries, and manage them by diversifying the search results returned in order to cover the different possible interpretations of the query. We present an original formulation of the results diversification problem in terms of an objective function to be maximized that admits the finding of an optimal solution in linear time.Source: 20th International Conference Companion on World Wide Web, WWW11, pp. 17–18, Hyderabad, India, March 28 - April 1 2011
DOI: 10.1145/1963192.1963202
Metrics:


See at: doi.org Restricted | portal.acm.org Restricted | CNR ExploRA


2011 Journal article Open Access OPEN
Efficient diversification of Web search results
Capannini G., Nardini F. M., Perego R., Silvestri F.
In this paper we analyze the efficiency of various search results diversification methods. While ecacy of diversification approaches has been deeply investigated in the past, response time and scalability issues have been rarely addressed. A unied framework for studying performance and feasibility of result diversification solutions is thus proposed. First we dene a new methodology for detecting when, and how, query results need to be diversied. To this purpose, we rely on the concept of "query renement" to estimate the probability of a query to be ambiguous. Then, relying on this novel ambiguity detection method, we deploy and compare on a standard test set, three dierent diversification methods: IASelect, xQuAD, and OptSelect. While the rst two are recent state-of-the-art proposals, the latter is an original algorithm introduced in this paper. We evaluate both the efficiency and the effctiveness of our approach against its competitors by using the standard TREC Web diversification track testbed. Results shown that OptSelect is able to run two orders of magnitude faster than the two other state-of-the-art approaches and to obtain comparable figures in diversification effctiveness.Source: Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment 4 (2011): 451–459. doi:10.14778/1988776.1988781
DOI: 10.14778/1988776.1988781
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.1105.4255
Project(s): S-CUBE via OpenAIRE
Metrics:


See at: arXiv.org e-Print Archive Open Access | Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment Open Access | Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment Restricted | doi.org Restricted | www.scopus.com Restricted | www.vldb.org Restricted | CNR ExploRA


2011 Conference article Restricted
Improving Europeana search experience using query logs
Ceccarelli D., Gordea S., Lucchese C., Nardini F. M., Tolomei G.
Europeana is a long-term project funded by the European Commission with the goal of making Europe's cultural and scientific heritage accessible to the public. Since 2008, about 1500 institutions have contributed to Europeana, enabling people to explore the digital re- sources of Europe's museums, libraries and archives. The huge amount of collected multi-lingual multi-media data is made available today through the Europeana portal, a search engine allowing users to explore such con- tent through textual queries. One of the most important techniques for enhancing users search experience in large information spaces, is the exploitation of the knowledge contained in query logs. In this paper we present a characterization of the Europeana query log, showing statistics on common behavioral patterns of the Europeana users. Our analysis highlights some significative differences between the Europeana query log and the historical data collected by general purpose Web Search Engine logs. In particular, we find out that both query and search session distributions show different behaviors. Finally, we use this information for designing a query recommendation technique having the goal of enhancing the functionality of the Europeana portal.Source: Research and Advanced Technology for Digital Libraries. International Conference on Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries, pp. 384–395, Berlin, Germany, 26-27-28 SETTEMBRE 2011
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-24469-8_39
Project(s): ASSETS
Metrics:


See at: doi.org Restricted | gateway.webofknowledge.com Restricted | www.springerlink.com Restricted | CNR ExploRA


2011 Report Open Access OPEN
Mining lifecycle event logs for enhancing service-based applications
Nardini F. M., Tolomei G., Silvestri F., Leitner P., Dustdar S.
Service-Oriented Architectures (SOAs), and traditional enterprise systems in general, record a variety of events (e.g., messages being sent and received between service components) to proper log files, i.e., event logs. These files constitute a huge and valuable source of knowledge that may be extracted through data mining techniques. To this end, process mining is increasingly gaining interest across the SOA community. The goal of process mining is to build models without emph{a priori} knowledge, i.e., to discover structured process models derived from specific emph{patterns} that are present in actual traces of service executions recorded in event logs. However, in this work we focus on detecting frequent sequential patterns, thus considering process mining as a specific instance of the more general sequential pattern mining problem. Furthermore, we apply two sequential pattern mining algorithms to a real event log provided by the Vienna Runtime Environment for Service-oriented Computing, i.e., vresco. The obtained results show that we are able to find services that are frequently invoked together within the same sequence. Such knowledge could be useful at design-time, when service-based application developers could be provided with service recommendation tools that are able to predict and thus to suggest next services that should be included in the current service composition.Source: ISTI Technical reports, 2011
Project(s): S-CUBE via OpenAIRE

See at: ISTI Repository Open Access | CNR ExploRA


2011 Doctoral thesis Open Access OPEN
Query Log Mining to Enhance User Experience in Search Engines
Nardini F. M.
The Web is the biggest repository of documents humans have ever built. Even more, it is increasingly growing in size every day. Users rely on Web search engines (WSEs) for finding information on the Web. By submitting a textual query expressing their information need, WSE users obtain a list of documents that are highly relevant to the query. Moreover, WSEs tend to store such huge amount of users activities in query logs. Query log mining is the set of techniques aiming at extracting valuable knowledge from query logs. This knowledge represents one of the most used ways of enhancing the users search experience. According to this vision, in this thesis we firstly prove that the knowledge extracted from query logs suffer aging effects and we thus propose a solution to this phenomenon. Secondly, we propose new algorithms for query recommendation that overcome the aging problem. Moreover, we study new query recommendation techniques for efficiently producing recommendations for rare queries. Finally, we study the problem of diversifying Web search engine results. We define a methodology based on the knowledge derived from query logs for detecting when and how query results need to be diversified and we develop an efficient algorithm for diversifying search results.

See at: ISTI Repository Open Access | CNR ExploRA


2011 Report Open Access OPEN
S-CUBE - Knowledge extraction from service usage
Silvestri F., Nardini F. M., Tolomei G.
Data is everywhere. Computer systems keep track of activities of users in the form of log files. Ranging from system logs on Web servers to logs collected by large-scale service based applications, this type of data represents a goldmine of knowledge that, once extracted, can help the stakeholders of the whole system to understand better if, and how, the application can be improved. To this aim, data mining consist of a set of techniques aiming at extracting patterns from large data sets by combining methods from statistics and artificial intelligence with database management. With recent tremendous technical advances in processing power, storage capacity, and inter-connectivity of computer technology, data mining is seen as an increasingly important tool by modern business to transform unprecedented quantities of digital data into business intelligence giving an informational advantage. Service-centric systems are said to be flexible and dynamic. To support this flexibility, event processing mechanisms can be used to record which events occur within the system. This includes both basic "service events" (e.g., service is created) and complex events regarding QoS (e.g., average response time of service X has changed) and invocations (e.g., service X has been invoked), supporting complex event processing. Users can subscribe to various events of interest, and get notified either via email or Web service notifications (e.g., WS-Eventing). Such notifications may trigger adaptive behavior (e.g., rebinding to other services). Service Oriented Architectures (SOAs) are thus complex infrastructures consisting of thousands or millions of service interacting together in order to achieve complex operations (tasks). Service invocation logs are file tracing the interactions between services. As in other contexts, data mining techniques can be thus applied in order to derive useful knowledge. Such knowledge can be spent in order to enhance both effectiveness and efficiency of the overall infrastructure. The same approach within other fields like, for example, the Web domain is proven to be effective. The knowledge extracted by means of data mining techniques from query logs (files containing the interactions of the users with the search engine) is the first way a search engine improve its performances in terms of effectiveness and efficiency. In this deliverable we thus investigate how useful knowledge can be extracted from service logs and possible ways of applications within the SOA context. In order to do that as one of the case studies we will use logs from search engines activities to extract knowledge regarding users activity.Source: Project report, S-CUBE, Deliverable #PO-JRA-2.3.7, 2011
Project(s): S-CUBE via OpenAIRE

See at: ISTI Repository Open Access | CNR ExploRA