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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Improving Web Search Ranking Using the Internet Archive

Li, Liyan 02 June 2020 (has links)
Current web search engines retrieve relevant results only based on the latest content of web pages stored in their indices despite the fact that many web resources update frequently. We explore possible techniques and data sources for improving web search result ranking using web page historical content change. We compare web pages with previous versions and separately model texts and relevance signals in the newly added, retained, and removed parts. We particularly examine the Internet Archive, the largest web archiving service thus far, for its effectiveness in improving web search performance. We experiment with a few possible retrieval techniques, including language modeling approaches using refined document and query representations built based on comparing current web pages to previous versions and Learning-to-rank methods for combining relevance features in different versions of web pages. Experimental results on two large-scale retrieval datasets (ClueWeb09 and ClueWeb12) suggest it is promising to use web page content change history to improve web search performance. However, it is worth mentioning that the actual effectiveness at this moment is affected by the practical coverage of the Internet Archive and the amount of regularly-changing resources among the relevant information related to search queries. Our work is the first step towards a promising area combining web search and web archiving, and discloses new opportunities for commercial search engines and web archiving services. / Master of Science / Current web search engines show search documents only based on the most recent version of web pages stored in their database despite the fact that many web resources update frequently. We explore possible techniques and data sources for improving web search result ranking using web page historical content change. We compare web pages with previous versions and get the newly added, retained, and removed parts. We examine the Internet Archive in particular, the largest web archiving service now, for its effectiveness in improving web search performance. We experiment with a few possible retrieval techniques, including language modeling approaches using refined document and query representations built based on comparing current web pages to previous versions and Learning-to-rank methods for combining relevance features in different versions of web pages. Experimental results on two large-scale retrieval datasets (ClueWeb09 and ClueWeb12) suggest it is promising to use web page content change history to improve web search performance. However, it is worth mentioning that the actual effectiveness at this point is affected by the practical coverage of the Internet Archive and the amount of ever-changing resources among the relevant information related to search queries. Our work is the first step towards a promising area combining web search and web archiving, and discloses new opportunities for commercial search engines and web archiving services.

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