Logic-based XML information retrieval for determining the best element to retrieve
INEX'04 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Initiative for the Evaluation of XML Retrieval
Cross-language information filtering: word sense disambiguation vs. distributional models
AI*IA'11 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Artificial intelligence around man and beyond
Hi-index | 0.00 |
The theory of Human Plausible Reasoning (HPR) is an attempt by Collins and Michalski to explain how people answer questions when they are uncertain. The theory consists of a set of patterns and a set of inferences which could be applied on those patterns. This paper, investigates the application of HPR theory to the domain of cross language filtering. Our approach combines Natural Language Processing with HPR. The documents and topics are partially represented by automatically extracted concepts, logical terms and logical statements in a language neutral knowledge base. Reasoning provides the evidence of relevance. We have conducted hundreds of experiments especially with the depth of the reasoning, evidence combination and topic selection methods. The results show that HPR contributes to the overall performance by introducing new terms for topics. Also the number of inference paths from a document to a topic is an indication of its relevance.