Information Retrieval and Web Search
Pandu Nayak and Prabhakar Raghavan
Lecture 8: Evaluation
How do we know if our results are any good?
Evaluating a search engine
Benchmarks
Precision and recall
Results summaries:
Making our good results usable to a user
How fast does it index
Number of documents/hour
(Average document size)
How fast does it search
Latency as a function of index size
Expressiveness of query language
Ability to express complex information needs
Speed on complex queries
Uncluttered UI
Is it free?
All of the preceding criteria are measurable: we can quantify speed/size
we can make expressiveness precise
The key measure: user happiness
What is this?
Speed of response/size of index are factors
But blindingly fast, useless answers won’t make a user happy
Need a way of quantifying user happiness
Issue: who is the user we are trying to make happy?
Depends on the setting
Web engine:
User finds what s/he wants and returns to the engine
Can measure rate of return users
User completes task – search as a means, not end
See Russell http://dmrussell.googlepages.com/JCDL-talk-June-2007-short.pdf
eCommerce site: user finds what s/he wants and buys
Is it the end-user, or the eCommerce site, whose happiness we measure?
Measure time to purchase, or fraction of searchers who become buyers?
Enterprise (company/govt/academic): Care about “user productivity”
How much time do my users save when looking for information?
Many other criteria having to do with breadth of access, secure access, etc.
Most common proxy: relevance of search results
But how do you measure relevance?
We will detail a methodology here, then examine its issues
Relevance measurement requires 3 elements:
A benchmark document collection
A benchmark suite of queries
A usually binary assessment of either Relevant or Nonrelevant for each query and each document
Some work on more-than-binary, but not the standard
Note: the information need is translated into a query
Relevance is assessed relative to the information need not the query
E.g., Information need: I'm looking for information on whether drinking red wine is more effective at reducing your risk of heart attacks than white wine.
Query: wine red white heart attack effective
Evaluate whether the doc addresses the information need, not whether it has these words
TREC - National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has run a large IR test bed for many years
Reuters and other benchmark doc collections used
“Retrieval tasks” specified
sometimes as queries
Human experts mark, for each query and for each doc, Relevant or Nonrelevant
or at least for subset of docs that some system returned for that query
Precision: fraction of retrieved docs that are relevant = P(relevant|retrieved)
Recall: fraction of relevant docs that are retrieved
= P(retrieved|relevant)
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Given a query, an engine classifies each doc as “Relevant” or “Nonrelevant”
The accuracy of an engine: the fraction of these classifications that are correct
(tp + tn) / ( tp + fp + fn + tn)
Accuracy is a commonly used evaluation measure in machine learning classification work
Why is this not a very useful evaluation measure in IR?
How to build a 99.9999% accurate search engine on a low budget….
People doing information retrieval want to find something and have a certain tolerance for junk.
You can get high recall (but low precision) by retrieving all docs for all queries!
Recall is a non-decreasing function of the number of docs retrieved
In a good system, precision decreases as either the number of docs retrieved or recall increases
This is not a theorem, but a result with strong empirical confirmation
Should average over large document collection/query ensembles
Need human relevance assessments
People aren’t reliable assessors
Assessments have to be binary
Nuanced assessments?
Heavily skewed by collection/authorship
Results may not translate from one domain to another
Combined measure that assesses precision/recall tradeoff is F measure (weighted harmonic mean):
People usually use balanced F1 measure
i.e., with β = 1 or a= ½
Harmonic mean is a conservative average
See CJ van Rijsbergen, Information Retrieval
Evaluation of ranked results:
The system can return any number of results
By taking various numbers of the top returned documents (levels of recall), the evaluator can produce a precision-recall curve
A precision-recall graph for one query isn’t a very sensible thing to look at
You need to average performance over a whole bunch of queries.
But there’s a technical issue:
Precision-recall calculations place some points on the graph
How do you determine a value (interpolate) between the points?
Idea: If locally precision increases with increasing recall, then you should get to count that…
So you take the max of precisions to right of value
Graphs are good, but people want summary measures!
Precision at fixed retrieval level
Precision-at-k: Precision of top k results
Perhaps appropriate for most of web search: all people want are good matches on the first one or two results pages
But: averages badly and has an arbitrary parameter of k
11-point interpolated average precision
The standard measure in the early TREC competitions: you take the precision at 11 levels of recall varying from 0 to 1 by tenths of the documents, using interpolation (the value for 0 is always interpolated!), and average them
Evaluates performance at all recall levels
SabIR/Cornell 8A1 11pt precision from TREC 8 (1999)
Mean average precision (MAP)
Average of the precision value obtained for the top k documents, each time a relevant doc is retrieved
Avoids interpolation, use of fixed recall levels
MAP for query collection is arithmetic ave.
Macro-averaging: each query counts equally
R-precision
If we have a known (though perhaps incomplete) set of relevant documents of size Rel, then calculate precision of the top Rel docs returned
Perfect system could score 1.0.
For a test collection, it is usual that a system does crummily on some information needs (e.g., MAP = 0.1) and excellently on others (e.g., MAP = 0.7)
Indeed, it is usually the case that the variance in performance of the same system across queries is much greater than the variance of different systems on the same query.
That is, there are easy information needs and hard ones!
Creating Test Collections
for IR Evaluation
Relevance assessments
Test queries
Must be germane to docs available
Best designed by domain experts
Random query terms generally not a good idea
Relevance assessments
Human judges, time-consuming
Are human panels perfect?
Kappa measure
Agreement measure among judges
Designed for categorical judgments
Corrects for chance agreement
Kappa = [ P(A) – P(E) ] / [ 1 – P(E) ]
P(A) – proportion of time judges agree
P(E) – what agreement would be by chance
Kappa = 0 for chance agreement, 1 for total agreement.
P(A)? P(E)?
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P(A) = 370/400 = 0.925
P(nonrelevant) = (10+20+70+70)/800 = 0.2125
P(relevant) = (10+20+300+300)/800 = 0.7878
P(E) = 0.2125^2 + 0.7878^2 = 0.665
Kappa = (0.925 – 0.665)/(1-0.665) = 0.776
Kappa > 0.8 = good agreement
0.67 < Kappa < 0.8 -> “tentative conclusions” (Carletta ’96)
Depends on purpose of study
For >2 judges: average pairwise kappas
TREC Ad Hoc task from first 8 TRECs is standard IR task
50 detailed information needs a year
Human evaluation of pooled results returned
More recently other related things: Web track, HARD
A TREC query (TREC 5)
What is the main function of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the funding level provided to meet emergencies? Also, what resources are available to FEMA such as people, equipment, facilities?
GOV2
Another TREC/NIST collection
25 million web pages
Largest collection that is easily available
But still 3 orders of magnitude smaller than what Google/Yahoo/MSN index
NTCIR
East Asian language and cross-language information retrieval
Cross Language Evaluation Forum (CLEF)
This evaluation series has concentrated on European languages and cross-language information retrieval.
Many others
Impact on absolute performance measure can be significant (0.32 vs 0.39)
Little impact on ranking of different systems or relative performance
Suppose we want to know if algorithm A is better than algorithm B
A standard information retrieval experiment will give us a reliable answer to this question.
Relevance vs Marginal Relevance
A document can be redundant even if it is highly relevant
Duplicates
The same information from different sources
Marginal relevance is a better measure of utility for the user.
Using facts/entities as evaluation units more directly measures true relevance.
But harder to create evaluation set
See Carbonell reference
No
Makes experimental work hard
Especially on a large scale
In some very specific settings, can use proxies
E.g.: for approximate vector space retrieval, we can compare the cosine distance closeness of the closest docs to those found by an approximate retrieval algorithm
But once we have test collections, we can reuse them (so long as we don’t overtrain too badly)
Search engines have test collections of queries and hand-ranked results
Recall is difficult to measure on the web
Search engines often use precision at top k, e.g., k = 10
. . . or measures that reward you more for getting rank 1 right than for getting rank 10 right.
NDCG (Normalized Cumulative Discounted Gain)
Search engines also use non-relevance-based measures.
Clickthrough on first result
Not very reliable if you look at a single clickthrough … but pretty reliable in the aggregate.
Studies of user behavior in the lab
A/B testing
Purpose: Test a single innovation
Prerequisite: You have a large search engine up and running.
Have most users use old system
Divert a small proportion of traffic (e.g., 1%) to the new system that includes the innovation
Evaluate with an “automatic” measure like clickthrough on first result
Now we can directly see if the innovation does improve user happiness.
Probably the evaluation methodology that large search engines trust most
In principle less powerful than doing a multivariate regression analysis, but easier to understand
Results presentation
Having ranked the documents matching a query, we wish to present a results list
Most commonly, a list of the document titles plus a short summary, aka “10 blue links”
The title is often automatically extracted from document metadata. What about the summaries?
This description is crucial.
User can identify good/relevant hits based on description.
Two basic kinds:
Static
Dynamic
A static summary of a document is always the same, regardless of the query that hit the doc
A dynamic summary is a query-dependent attempt to explain why the document was retrieved for the query at hand
In typical systems, the static summary is a subset of the document
Simplest heuristic: the first 50 (or so – this can be varied) words of the document
Summary cached at indexing time
More sophisticated: extract from each document a set of “key” sentences
Simple NLP heuristics to score each sentence
Summary is made up of top-scoring sentences.
Most sophisticated: NLP used to synthesize a summary
Seldom used in IR; cf. text summarization work
Present one or more “windows” within the document that contain several of the query terms
“KWIC” snippets: Keyword in Context presentation
Find small windows in doc that contain query terms
Requires fast window lookup in a document cache
Score each window wrt query
Use various features such as window width, position in document, etc.
Combine features through a scoring function – methodology to be covered Nov 12th
Challenges in evaluation: judging summaries
Easier to do pairwise comparisons rather than binary relevance assessments
For a navigational query such as united airlines user’s need likely satisfied on www.united.com
Quicklinks provide navigational cues on that home page
IIR 8
MIR Chapter 3
MG 4.5
Carbonell and Goldstein 1998. The use of MMR, diversity-based reranking for reordering documents and producing summaries. SIGIR 21.