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SIGIR
2006
ACM

Bias and the limits of pooling

13 years 10 months ago
Bias and the limits of pooling
Modern retrieval test collections are built through a process called pooling in which only a sample of the entire document set is judged for each topic. The idea behind pooling is to find enough relevant documents such that when unjudged documents are assumed to be nonrelevant the resulting judgment set is sufficiently complete and unbiased. Yet a constant-size pool represents an increasingly small percentage of the document set as document sets grow larger, and at some point the assumption of approximately complete judgments must become invalid. This paper shows that the judgment sets produced by traditional pooling when the pools are too small relative to the total document set size can be biased in that they favor relevant documents that contain topic title words. This phenomenon is wholly dependent on the collection size and does not depend on the number of relevant documents for a given topic. We show that the AQUAINT test collection constructed in the recent TREC 2005 workshop ...
Chris Buckley, Darrin Dimmick, Ian Soboroff, Ellen
Added 14 Jun 2010
Updated 14 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where SIGIR
Authors Chris Buckley, Darrin Dimmick, Ian Soboroff, Ellen M. Voorhees
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