user as the utility of an individual search (and then computes system utility as the average search utility), this paper argues that improvement in the task performance of the user is a much more appropriate measure of utility. From this it is shown that recall, while unimportant or even harmful in many search situations, is of vital importance in others. This is in contrast to Cooper's view that recall by itself is not a meaningful measure of system performance at all
This paper presents results comparing user preference for search engine rankings with measures of ef...
A range of methods for measuring the effectiveness of information retrieval systems has been propose...
© 2010 Dr. William Edward WebberFull-text retrieval systems employ heuristics to match documents to ...
Contains fulltext : 141626.pdf (author's version ) (Open Access)Users can judge th...
This paper presents results from an initial user study exploring the relationship between system eff...
The purpose of this article is to bring attention to the prob-lem of variations in relevance assessm...
This paper presents results from an initial user study exploring the relationship between system e...
This paper presents results from an initial user study exploring the relationship between system eff...
It is evident from previous research that user satisfaction is a multidimensional, subjective variab...
Information retrieval systems aim to help users satisfy information needs. We argue that the goal of...
Abstract Information retrieval has a strong founda-tion of empirical investigation: based on the pos...
The recall of a distant memory may appear satisfying and suggest successful retrieval is inherently ...
This paper presents results comparing user preference for search engine rankings with measures of ef...
Ease of retrieval experiences occur when an individual experiences difficulty in recalling many cog...
This paper briefly summarizes the history of evaluation in information retrieval and describes both...
This paper presents results comparing user preference for search engine rankings with measures of ef...
A range of methods for measuring the effectiveness of information retrieval systems has been propose...
© 2010 Dr. William Edward WebberFull-text retrieval systems employ heuristics to match documents to ...
Contains fulltext : 141626.pdf (author's version ) (Open Access)Users can judge th...
This paper presents results from an initial user study exploring the relationship between system eff...
The purpose of this article is to bring attention to the prob-lem of variations in relevance assessm...
This paper presents results from an initial user study exploring the relationship between system e...
This paper presents results from an initial user study exploring the relationship between system eff...
It is evident from previous research that user satisfaction is a multidimensional, subjective variab...
Information retrieval systems aim to help users satisfy information needs. We argue that the goal of...
Abstract Information retrieval has a strong founda-tion of empirical investigation: based on the pos...
The recall of a distant memory may appear satisfying and suggest successful retrieval is inherently ...
This paper presents results comparing user preference for search engine rankings with measures of ef...
Ease of retrieval experiences occur when an individual experiences difficulty in recalling many cog...
This paper briefly summarizes the history of evaluation in information retrieval and describes both...
This paper presents results comparing user preference for search engine rankings with measures of ef...
A range of methods for measuring the effectiveness of information retrieval systems has been propose...
© 2010 Dr. William Edward WebberFull-text retrieval systems employ heuristics to match documents to ...