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CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval. Lecture 26 Classification 1. Course Administration. Classification and Categorization. empirically-defined classes. pre-defined classes. terms. thesaurus. classification text categorization. documents. document clustering. Text categorization.
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CS 430 / INFO 430 Information Retrieval Lecture 26 Classification 1
Classification and Categorization empirically-defined classes pre-defined classes terms thesaurus classification text categorization documents document clustering
Text categorization Text categorization • Problem is to classify documents by whether they belong to a fixed set of pre-determined categories. • Each document may belong to many categories. • Each category is taken as a separate binary classification problem. Classification • Problem is to assign each document to exactly one pre-determined category.
Text categorization Outline • Select a subject domain. • Choose a corpus of documents that cover the domain. • Obtain a training set of documents that have been assigned to a set of categories. • Create a vocabulary by extracting terms, normalization, precoordination of phrases, etc. • Use the terms in a document as a feature set that describes the document. Scale the terms using idf or similar measure. • Use machine learning methods (e.g., support vector machine) to train an automatic classifier.
Lexicon and Thesaurus Lexicon contains information about words, their morphological variants, and their grammatical usage. Thesaurus relates words by meaning: ship, vessel, sail; craft, navy, marine, fleet, flotilla book, writing, work, volume, tome, tract, codex search, discovery, detection, find, revelation (From Roget's Thesaurus, 1911)
Thesaurus in Information Retrieval Use of a thesaurus in indexing (precoordination) A. Manual A human indexer assigns standard terms and associations. computer-aided instruction see also education UF teaching machines BT educational computing TT computer applications RT education RT teaching used for broader term top term related term From: INSPEC Thesaurus
Thesaurus in Information Retrieval Use of a thesaurus in indexing (precoordination) B. Automatic Divide terms into thesaurus classes. Replace similar terms by a thesaurus class. 408 dislocation 409 blast-cooled junction heat-flow minority-carrier heat-transfer n-p-n p-n-p 410 anneal point-contact strain recombine transition unijunction From: Salton and McGill
Desirable Properties for Information Retrieval • Thesaurus is specific to a subject area. Contains only terms of interest for identification within that subject area. • Ambiguous terms are coded only for the senses important for that field. • Target is that each thesaurus class should include terms of moderate frequency. Ideally the classes should have similar frequency.
Alexandria Thesaurus: Example canals A feature type category for places such as the Erie Canal. Used for: The category canals is used instead of any of the following. canal bends canalized streams ditch mouths ditches drainage canals drainage ditches ... more ... Broader Terms: Canals is a sub-type of hydrographic structures.
Alexandria Thesaurus: Example (continued) canals (continued) Related Terms: The following is a list of other categories related to canals (non-hierarchial relationships). channels locks transportation features tunnels Scope Note: Manmade waterway used by watercraft or for drainage, irrigation, mining, or water power. » Definition of canals.
Art and Architecture Thesaurus • Controlled vocabulary for describing and retrieving information: • fine art, architecture, decorative art, and material culture. • Almost 128,000 terms for objects, textual materials, images, • architecture and culture from all periods and all cultures. • Used by archives, museums, and libraries to describe items in their • collections. • Used as a database accessed via a Web site. • Used by computer programs, for information retrieval, and natural • language processing. • A project of the J. Paul Getty Trust • http://www.getty.edu/research/conducting_research/vocabularies/aat/
Art and Architecture Thesaurus • Provides the terminology for objects, and the vocabulary necessary to describe them, such as style, period, shape, color, construction, or use, and scholarly concepts, such as theories, or criticism. • Concept: • a cluster of terms, one of which is established as the preferred term, or descriptor. • Categories: • associated concepts, physical attributes, styles and periods, agents, activities, materials, and objects.
Art and Architecture Thesaurus: Sample Record Record ID: 198841 Descriptor: rhyta Note: Refers to vessels from Ancient Greece, eastern Europe, or the Middle East that typically have a closed form with two openings, one at the top for filling and one at the base so that liquid could stream out. They are often in the shape of a horn or an animal's head, and were typically used as a drinking cup or for pouring wine into another vessel. Hierarchy: Containers [TQ] ...<containers by function or context> ...........<culinary containers> ...................<containers for serving and consuming food>
Art and Architecture Thesaurus: Sample Record (continued) Terms: rhyta rhyton (alternate, singular) protomai protome rhea rheon rheons Related concepts: stirrup cups sturzbechers drinking vessels ceremonial vessels
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) National Library of Medicine's controlled vocabulary thesaurus The library provides MeSH subject headings for each article in the 4,800 journals that it indexes every year and every book, etc. acquired by the library. • 23,000 primary headings. • Additional thesaurus of about 151,000 chemical terms. • Terms are organized in a hierarchy. • 135,000 cross-references. Experts who understand the field and are able to formulate queries using MeSH terms and the MeSH structures.
MeSH hierarchy Biological Sciences [G] Biological Sciences [G01] + Health Occupations [G02] + Environment and Public Health [G03] + Biological Phenomena, Cell Phenomena, and Immunity [G04] + Genetics [G05] + Biochemical Phenomena, Metabolism, and Nutrition [G06] + Physiological Processes [G07] + Reproductive and Urinary Physiology [G08] + Circulatory and Respiratory Physiology [G09] + Digestive, Oral, and Skin Physiology [G10] + Musculoskeletal, Neural, and Ocular Physiology [G11] + Chemical and Pharmacologic Phenomena [G12] +
MeSH hierarchy (continued) Physiological Processes [G07] Adaptation, Physiological [G07.062] + Aging [G07.168] + Body Constitution [G07.265] + Body Temperature [G07.315] Body Temperature Regulation [G07.315.232] + Skin Temperature [G07.315.753] Chronobiology [G07.450] + Electrophysiology [G07.453] + Fluid Shifts [G07.503] Growth and Embryonic Development [G07.553] + Homeostasis [G07.621] + Tensile Strength [G07.900] Tropism [G07.950] +
MeSH hierarchy (continued) MeSH Heading Body Temperature Tree Number E01.370.600.120 Tree Number G07.315 Entry Term Organ Temperature See Also Fever See Also Thermography See Also Thermometers Allowable Qualifiers DE GE IM PH RE Unique ID D001831
Automatic Thesaurus Construction Outline • Select a subject domain. • Choose a corpus of documents that cover the domain. • Create vocabulary by extracting terms, normalization, precoordination of phrases, etc. • Devise a measure of similarity between terms and thesaurus classes. • Cluster terms into thesaurus classes, using a cluster method that generates compact clusters (e.g., complete linkage).
Normalization of vocabulary Normalization rules map variant forms into base expressions. Typical normalization rules for manual thesaurus construction are: (a) Nouns only, or nouns and noun phrases. • Singular nouns only. • Spelling (e.g., U.S.). • Capitalization, punctuation (e.g., hyphens), initials (e.g., IBM), abbreviations (e.g., Mr.). Usually, many possible decisions can be made, but they should be followed consistently. Which of these can be carried out automatically with reasonable accuracy?
Phrase construction In a precoordinated thesaurus, term classes may contain phrases. Informal definitions: pair-frequency (i, j) is the frequency that a given pair of words occur in context (e.g., in succession within a sentence) phrase is a pair of words, i and j that occur in context with a higher frequency than would be expected from their overall frequency cohesion (i, j) = observed pair-frequency (i, j) expected pair-frequency if i, j independent
Phrase construction: simple case Example: corpus of n terms pi, j is the observed frequency that a given pair of terms occur in succession. fi is the number of occurrences of term i in the corpus. There are n-1 pairs. If the terms are independent, the probability that a given pair begins with term i and ends with term j is (fi/n).(fj/n) cohesion (i, j) = n2.pi, j (n-1)fi.fj
Phrase construction Salton and McGill algorithm 1. Computer pair-frequency for all terms. 2. Reject all pairs that fall below a certain frequency threshold 3. Calculate cohesion values 4. If cohesion above a threshold value, consider word pair as a phrase. There is promising research on phrase identification using methods of computational linguistics
Similarities The vocabulary consists of a set of elements, each of which can be a single term or a phrase. The next step is to calculate a measure of similarity between elements. One measure of similarity is the number of documents that have terms i and k in common: S(tj, tk) = tijtik where tij = 1 if document i contains term j and 0 otherwise. n i=1
Similarities: Incidence array alpha bravo charlie delta echo foxtrot golf D1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 D2 1 1 1 D3 1 1 1 1 D4 1 1 1 1 n 3 2 2 3 2 3 3
Term similarity matrix alpha bravo charlie delta echo foxtrot golf alpha 1 1 3 1 2 3 bravo 1 2 1 2 2 1 charlie 1 2 1 2 2 1 delta 3 1 1 1 2 3 echo 1 2 2 1 2 1 foxtrot 2 2 2 2 2 2 golf 3 1 1 3 1 2 Using count of documents that have two terms in common
Similarity measures Improved similarity measures can be generated by: • Using term frequency matrix instead of incidence matrix • Weighting terms by frequency: cosine measure tijtik |tj| |tk| dice measure tijtik tik + tij n i=1 S(tj, tk) = n S(tj, tk) = i=1 n n i=1 i=1
Term similarity matrix alpha bravo charlie delta echo foxtrot golf alpha 0.2 0.2 0.5 0.2 0.33 0.5 bravo 0.2 0.5 0.2 0.5 0.4 0.2 charlie 0.2 0.5 0.2 0.5 0.4 0.2 delta 0.5 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.33 0.5 echo 0.2 0.5 0.5 0.2 0.4 0.2 foxtrot 0.33 0.4 0.4 0.33 0.4 0.33 golf 0.5 0.2 0.2 0.5 0.2 0.33 Using incidence matrix and dice weighting
Clustering terms to form concepts The final stage is to group similar terms together into concepts. This is done by cluster analysis. Cluster analysis is the topic of the next lecture.