Experimental components for the evaluation of interactive information retrieval systems
Top Cited Papers
- 1 February 2000
- journal article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Journal of Documentation
- Vol. 56 (1) , 71-90
- https://doi.org/10.1108/eum0000000007110
Abstract
This paper presents a set of basic components which constitutes the experimental setting intended for the evaluation of interactive information retrieval (IIR) systems, the aim of which is to facilitate evaluation of IIR systems in a way which is as close as possible to realistic IR processes. The experimental setting consists of three components: (1) the involvement of potential users as test persons; (2) the application of dynamic and individual information needs; and (3) the use of multidimensional and dynamic relevance judgements. Hidden under the information need component is the essential central sub‐component, the simulated work task situation, the tool that triggers the (simulated) dynamic information needs. This paper also reports on the empirical findings of the metaevaluation of the application of this sub‐component, the purpose of which is to discover whether the application of simulated work task situations to future evaluation of IIR systems can be recommended. Investigations are carried out to determine whether any search behavioural differences exist between test persons‘ treatment of their own real information needs versus simulated information needs. The hypothesis is that if no difference exists one can correctly substitute real information needs with simulated information needs through the application of simulated work task situations. The empirical results of the meta‐evaluation provide positive evidence for the application of simulated work task situations to the evaluation of IIR systems. The results also indicate that tailoring work task situations to the group of test persons is important in motivating them. Furthermore, the results of the evaluation show that different versions of semantic openness of the simulated situations make no difference to the test persons’ search treatment.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- The development of a method for the evaluation of interactive information retrieval systemsJournal of Documentation, 1997
- COGNITIVE PERSPECTIVES OF INFORMATION RETRIEVAL INTERACTION: ELEMENTS OF A COGNITIVE IR THEORYJournal of Documentation, 1996
- The relevance of recall and precision in user evaluationJournal of the American Society for Information Science, 1994
- A BEHAVIOURAL APPROACH TO INFORMATION RETRIEVAL SYSTEM DESIGNJournal of Documentation, 1989
- Cognitive models and information transferSocial Science Information Studies, 1984
- SEARCH PROCEDURES IN THE LIBRARY—ANALYSED FROM THE COGNITIVE POINT OF VIEWJournal of Documentation, 1982
- ASK FOR INFORMATION RETRIEVAL: PART I. BACKGROUND AND THEORYJournal of Documentation, 1982
- RELEVANCE: A review of and a framework for the thinking on the notion in information scienceJournal of the American Society for Information Science, 1975
- Situational relevanceInformation Storage and Retrieval, 1973
- OPENING THE BLACK BOX OF ‘RELEVANCE’Journal of Documentation, 1967