New event detection and topic tracking in Turkish
Author(s) -
Can Fazli,
Kocberber Seyit,
Baglioglu Ozgur,
Kardas Suleyman,
Ocalan H. Cagdas,
Uyar Erkan
Publication year - 2010
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.21264
Subject(s) - turkish , computer science , similarity (geometry) , event (particle physics) , word (group theory) , tracking (education) , truncation (statistics) , information retrieval , natural language processing , sample (material) , test (biology) , artificial intelligence , focus (optics) , scale (ratio) , data mining , machine learning , linguistics , psychology , paleontology , pedagogy , philosophy , physics , chemistry , chromatography , quantum mechanics , optics , image (mathematics) , biology
Topic detection and tracking (TDT) applications aim to organize the temporally ordered stories of a news stream according to the events. Two major problems in TDT are new event detection (NED) and topic tracking (TT). These problems focus on finding the first stories of new events and identifying all subsequent stories on a certain topic defined by a small number of sample stories. In this work, we introduce the first large‐scale TDT test collection for Turkish, and investigate the NED and TT problems in this language. We present our test‐collection‐construction approach, which is inspired by the TDT research initiative. We show that in TDT for Turkish with some similarity measures, a simple word truncation stemming method can compete with a lemmatizer‐based stemming approach. Our findings show that contrary to our earlier observations on Turkish information retrieval, in NED word stopping has an impact on effectiveness. We demonstrate that the confidence scores of two different similarity measures can be combined in a straightforward manner for higher effectiveness. The influence of several similarity measures on effectiveness also is investigated. We show that it is possible to deploy TT applications in Turkish that can be used in operational settings.
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