Abstract

Search result diversification aims at returning diversified document lists to cover different user intents of a query. Existing diversity measures assume that the intents of a query are disjoint, and do not consider their relationships. In this paper, we introduce intent hierarchies to model the relationships between intents, and present four weighing schemes. Based on intent hierarchies, we propose several hierarchical measures that take into account the relationships between intents. We demonstrate the feasibility of hierarchical measures by using a new test collection based on TREC Web Track 2009-2013 diversity test collections and by using NTCIR-11 IMine test collection. Our main experimental findings are: (1) Hierarchical measures are more discriminative and intuitive than existing measures. In terms of intuitiveness, it is preferable for hierarchical measures to use the whole intent hierarchies than to use only the leaf nodes. (2) The types of intent hierarchies used affect the discriminative power and intuitiveness of hierarchical measures. We suggest the best type of intent hierarchies to be used according to whether the nonuniform weights are available. (3) To measure the benefits of the diversification algorithms which use automatically mined hierarchical intents, it is important to use hierarchical measures instead of existing measures.

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