Difference between revisions of "Wikipedia as Sense Inventory to Improve Diversity in Web Search Results"
(Adding new article - Wikipedia as Sense Inventory to Improve Diversity in Web Search Results) |
(wikilinks) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | '''Wikipedia as Sense Inventory to Improve Diversity in Web Search Results''' - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2010, written by Celina Santamarı́a, Julio Gonzalo and Javier Artiles. | + | '''Wikipedia as Sense Inventory to Improve Diversity in Web Search Results''' - scientific work related to [[Wikipedia quality]] published in 2010, written by [[Celina Santamarı́a]], [[Julio Gonzalo]] and [[Javier Artiles]]. |
== Overview == | == Overview == | ||
− | Is it possible to use sense inventories to improve Web search results diversity for one word queries? To answer this question, authors focus on two broad-coverage lexical resources of a different nature: WordNet, as a de-facto standard used in Word Sense Disambiguation experiments; and Wikipedia, as a large coverage, updated encyclopaedic resource which may have a better coverage of relevant senses in Web pages. | + | Is it possible to use sense inventories to improve Web search results diversity for one word queries? To answer this question, authors focus on two broad-coverage lexical resources of a different nature: [[WordNet]], as a de-facto standard used in Word Sense Disambiguation experiments; and [[Wikipedia]], as a large coverage, updated encyclopaedic resource which may have a better coverage of relevant senses in Web pages. |
Revision as of 08:53, 20 December 2019
Wikipedia as Sense Inventory to Improve Diversity in Web Search Results - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2010, written by Celina Santamarı́a, Julio Gonzalo and Javier Artiles.
Overview
Is it possible to use sense inventories to improve Web search results diversity for one word queries? To answer this question, authors focus on two broad-coverage lexical resources of a different nature: WordNet, as a de-facto standard used in Word Sense Disambiguation experiments; and Wikipedia, as a large coverage, updated encyclopaedic resource which may have a better coverage of relevant senses in Web pages.