Mobile information retrieval with search results clustering: Prototypes and evaluations
Author(s) -
Carpineto Claudio,
Mizzaro Stefano,
Romano Giovanni,
Snidero Matteo
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of the american society for information science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1532-2890
pISSN - 1532-2882
DOI - 10.1002/asi.21036
Subject(s) - computer science , cluster analysis , information retrieval , task (project management) , search engine , mobile phone , mobile device , world wide web , interface (matter) , document clustering , data mining , artificial intelligence , bubble , telecommunications , management , maximum bubble pressure method , parallel computing , economics
Web searches from mobile devices such as PDAs and cell phones are becoming increasingly popular. However, the traditional list‐based search interface paradigm does not scale well to mobile devices due to their inherent limitations. In this article, we investigate the application of search results clustering, used with some success for desktop computer searches, to the mobile scenario. Building on CREDO (Conceptual Reorganization of Documents), a Web clustering engine based on concept lattices, we present its mobile versions Credino and SmartCREDO , for PDAs and cell phones, respectively. Next, we evaluate the retrieval performance of the three prototype systems. We measure the effectiveness of their clustered results compared to a ranked list of results on a subtopic retrieval task, by means of the device‐independent notion of subtopic reach time together with a reusable test collection built from Wikipedia ambiguous entries. Then, we make a cross‐comparison of methods (i.e., clustering and ranked list) and devices (i.e., desktop, PDA, and cell phone), using an interactive information‐finding task performed by external participants. The main finding is that clustering engines are a viable complementary approach to plain search engines both for desktop and mobile searches especially, but not only, for multitopic informational queries.
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