Where should the person stop and the information search interface start?
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Journal of the American Society for Information Science - Special issue: relevance research
User-defined relevance criteria: an exploratory study
Journal of the American Society for Information Science - Special issue: relevance research
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Journal of the American Society for Information Science - Special topic issue on the history of documentation and information science: part II
A cognitive model of document use during a research project. Study I. document selection
Journal of the American Society for Information Science
Users' criteria for relevance evaluation: a cross-situational comparison
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
The use of MMR, diversity-based reranking for reordering documents and producing summaries
Proceedings of the 21st annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
Proceedings of the 22nd annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
Journal of the American Society for Information Science - Special issue on the 50th anniversary of the Journal of The American Society for Information Science: part 2: paradigms, models and methods of information science
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Interactive query expansion: a user-based evaluation in a relevance feedback environment
Journal of the American Society for Information Science
Searching the Web: the public and their queries
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Relevance judging, evaluation, and decision making in virtual libraries: a descriptive study
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Modern Information Retrieval
Novelty and redundancy detection in adaptive filtering
SIGIR '02 Proceedings of the 25th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
Using graded relevance assessments in IR evaluation
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Topic-conditioned novelty detection
Proceedings of the eighth ACM SIGKDD international conference on Knowledge discovery and data mining
Relevance thresholds: a multi-stage predictive model of how users evaluate information
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Changes of search terms and tactics while writing a research proposal A longitudinal case study
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Beyond independent relevance: methods and evaluation metrics for subtopic retrieval
Proceedings of the 26th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in informaion retrieval
Retrieval and novelty detection at the sentence level
Proceedings of the 26th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in informaion retrieval
A System for new event detection
Proceedings of the 26th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in informaion retrieval
The concept of relevance in IR
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Text classification and named entities for new event detection
Proceedings of the 27th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
The Turn: Integration of Information Seeking and Retrieval in Context (The Information Retrieval Series)
Relevance judgment: What do information users consider beyond topicality?
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology - Research Articles
Novelty and diversity in information retrieval evaluation
Proceedings of the 31st annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
Proceedings of the Second ACM International Conference on Web Search and Data Mining
Full-Subtopic Retrieval with Keyphrase-Based Search Results Clustering
WI-IAT '09 Proceedings of the 2009 IEEE/WIC/ACM International Joint Conference on Web Intelligence and Intelligent Agent Technology - Volume 01
Jointly optimising relevance and diversity in image retrieval
Proceedings of the ACM International Conference on Image and Video Retrieval
Evaluating subtopic retrieval methods: Clustering versus diversification of search results
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
How managers interpret scanning information
Information and Management
CICLing'10 Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Computational Linguistics and Intelligent Text Processing
Because not all displays are lists
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM International Conference on Multimedia Retrieval
Measuring the coverage and redundancy of information search services on e-commerce platforms
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
mNIR: diversifying search results based on a mixture of novelty, intention and relevance
WISE'12 Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Web Information Systems Engineering
Exploiting relevance, coverage, and novelty for query-focused multi-document summarization
Knowledge-Based Systems
The tantalizing new prospect of index-based diversified retrieval
Proceedings of the 2013 Sigmod/PODS Ph.D. symposium on PhD symposium
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The information science research community is characterized by a paradigm split, with a system-centered cluster working on information retrieval (IR) algorithms and a user-centered cluster working on user behavior. The two clusters rarely leverage each other's insight and strength. One major suggestion from user-centered studies is to treat the relevance judgment of documents as a subjective, multidimensional, and dynamic concept rather than treating it as objective and based on topicality only. This study explores the possibility to enhance users' topicality-based relevance judgment with subjective novelty judgment in interactive IR. A set of systems is developed which differs in the way the novelty judgment is incorporated. In particular, this study compares systems which assume that users' novelty judgment is directed to a certain subtopic area and those which assume that users' novelty judgment is undirected. This study also compares systems which assume that users judge a document based on topicality first and then novelty in a stepwise, noncompensatory fashion and those which assume that users consider topicality and novelty simultaneously and as compensatory to each other. The user study shows that systems assuming directed novelty in general have higher relevance precision, but systems assuming a stepwise judgment process and systems assuming a compensatory judgment process are not significantly different. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.