A STATISTICAL INTERPRETATION OF TERM SPECIFICITY AND ITS APPLICATION IN RETRIEVAL
- 1 January 1972
- journal article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Journal of Documentation
- Vol. 28 (1), 11-21
- https://doi.org/10.1108/eb026526
Abstract
The exhaustivity of document descriptions and the specificity of index terms are usually regarded as independent. It is suggested that specificity should be interpreted statistically, as a function of term use rather than of term meaning. The effects on retrieval of variations in term specificity are examined, experiments with three test collections showing in particular that frequently-occurring terms are required for good overall performance. It is argued that terms should be weighted according to collection frequency, so that matches on less frequent, more specific, terms are of greater value than matches on frequent terms. Results for the test collections show that considerable improvements in performance are obtained with this very simple procedure.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effectiveness of automatically generated weights and links in mechanical indexingAmerican Documentation, 1969
- Computer Evaluation of Indexing and Text ProcessingJournal of the ACM, 1968
- Distribution of indexing terms for maximum efficiency of information transmissionAmerican Documentation, 1967