Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries PV211: Introduction to Information Retrieval https://www.fi.muni.cz/~sojka/PV211 IIR 8: Evaluation & Result Summaries Handout version Petr Sojka, Martin Líška, Hinrich Schütze et al. Faculty of Informatics, Masaryk University, Brno Center for Information and Language Processing, University of Munich 2023-03-15 (compiled on 2023-03-15 11:53) Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 1 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Overview 1 Introduction 2 Unranked evaluation 3 Ranked evaluation 4 Benchmarks 5 Result summaries Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 2 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Take-away today Introduction to evaluation: Measures of an IR system Evaluation of unranked and ranked retrieval Evaluation benchmarks Result summaries Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 3 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Evaluation How well does an IR system work? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 5 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Measures for a search engine How fast does it index e.g., number of bytes per hour How fast does it search e.g., latency as a function of queries per second What is the cost per query? in dollars Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 8 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Measures for a search engine All of the preceding criteria are measurable: we can quantify speed / size / money However, the key measure for a search engine is user happiness. What is user happiness? Factors include: Speed of response Size of index Uncluttered UI Most important: relevance (actually, maybe even more important: it’s free) Note that none of these is sufficient: blindingly fast, but useless answers won’t make a user happy. How can we quantify user happiness? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 9 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Who is the user? Who is the user we are trying to make happy? Web search engine: searcher. Success: Searcher finds what she was looking for. Measure: rate of return to this search engine Web search engine: advertiser. Success: Searcher clicks on ad. Measure: clickthrough rate E-commerce: buyer. Success: Buyer buys something. Measures: time to purchase, fraction of “conversions” of searchers to buyers E-commerce: seller. Success: Seller sells something. Measure: profit per item sold Enterprise: CEO. Success: Employees are more productive (because of effective search). Measure: profit of the company Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 10 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Most common definition of user happiness: Relevance User happiness is equated with the relevance of search results to the query. But how do you measure relevance? Standard methodology in information retrieval consists of three elements. A benchmark document collection A benchmark suite of queries An assessment of the relevance of each query-document pair Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 11 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Relevance: query vs. information need Relevance to what? First take: relevance to the query “Relevance to the query” is very problematic. Information need i: “I am looking for information on whether drinking red wine is more effective at reducing your risk of heart attacks than white wine.” This is an information need, not a query. Query q: [red wine white wine heart attack] Consider document d′: At the heart of his speech was an attack on the wine industry lobby for downplaying the role of red and white wine in drunk driving. d′ is an excellent match for query q . . . d′ is not relevant to the information need i. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 12 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Relevance: query vs. information need User happiness can only be measured by relevance to an information need, not by relevance to queries. Our terminology is sloppy in these slides and in IIR: we talk about query-document relevance judgments even though we mean information-need-document relevance judgments. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 13 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Precision and recall Precision (P) is the fraction of retrieved documents that are relevant Precision = #(relevant items retrieved) #(retrieved items) = P(relevant|retrieved) Recall (R) is the fraction of relevant documents that are retrieved Recall = #(relevant items retrieved) #(relevant items) = P(retrieved|relevant) Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 15 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Precision and recall Relevant Nonrelevant Retrieved true positives (TP) false positives (FP) Not retrieved false negatives (FN) true negatives (TN) P = TP/(TP + FP) R = TP/(TP + FN) Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 16 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Precision/recall tradeoff You can increase recall by returning more docs. Recall is a non-decreasing function of the number of docs retrieved. A system that returns all docs has 100% recall! The converse is also true (usually): It’s easy to get high precision for very low recall. Suppose the document with the largest score is relevant. How can we maximize precision? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 17 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries A combined measure: F F allows us to trade off precision against recall. F = 1 α 1 P + (1 − α) 1 R = (β2 + 1)PR β2P + R where β2 = 1 − α α α ∈ [0, 1] and thus β2 ∈ [0, ∞] Most frequently used: balanced F with β = 1 or α = 0.5 This is the harmonic mean of P and R: 1 F = 1 2 ( 1 P + 1 R ) What value range of β weights recall higher than precision? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 18 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Example for precision, recall, F1 relevant not relevant retrieved 20 40 60 not retrieved 60 1,000,000 1,000,060 80 1,000,040 1,000,120 P = 20/(20 + 40) = 1/3 R = 20/(20 + 60) = 1/4 F1 = 2 1 1 1 3 + 1 1 4 = 2/7 Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 19 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Accuracy Why do we use complex measures like precision, recall, and F? Why not something simple like accuracy? Accuracy is the fraction of decisions (relevant/nonrelevant) that are correct. In terms of the contingency table above, accuracy = (TP + TN)/(TP + FP + FN + TN). Why is accuracy not a useful measure for web information retrieval? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 20 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Exercise Compute precision, recall and F1 for this result set: relevant not relevant retrieved 18 2 not retrieved 82 1,000,000,000 The snoogle search engine below always returns 0 results (“0 matching results found”), regardless of the query. Why does snoogle demonstrate that accuracy is not a useful measure in IR? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 21 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Why accuracy is a useless measure in IR Simple trick to maximize accuracy in IR: always say no and return nothing You then get 99.99% accuracy on most queries. Searchers on the web (and in IR in general) want to find something and have a certain tolerance for junk. It’s better to return some bad hits as long as you return something. → We use precision, recall, and F for evaluation, not accuracy. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 22 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries F: Why harmonic mean? Why don’t we use a different mean of P and R as a measure? e.g., the arithmetic mean The simple (arithmetic) mean is 50% for “return-everything” search engine, which is too high. Desideratum: Punish really bad performance on either precision or recall. Taking the minimum achieves this. But minimum is not smooth and hard to weight. F (harmonic mean) is a kind of smooth minimum. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 23 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries F1 and other averages We can view the harmonic mean as a kind of soft minimum Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 24 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Difficulties in using precision, recall and F We need relevance judgments for information-need-document pairs – but they are expensive to produce. For alternatives to using precision/recall and having to produce relevance judgments – see end of this lecture. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 25 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Mean Average Precision MAP(Q) = 1 |Q| ∑|Q| j=1 1 mj ∑mj k=1 Precision(Rjk) For one query it is the area under the uninterpolated precision-recall curve, and so the MAP is roughly the average area under the precision-recall curve for a set of queries. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 26 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Precision-recall curve Precision/recall/F are measures for unranked sets. We can easily turn set measures into measures of ranked lists. Just compute the set measure for each “prefix”: the top 1 (P@1), top 2, top 3, top 4, etc., results Doing this for precision and recall gives you a precision-recall curve. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 28 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries A precision-recall curve 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 Recall Precision Each point corresponds to a result for the top k ranked hits (k = 1, 2, 3, 4, . . .). Interpolation (in red): Take maximum of all future points Rationale for interpolation: The user is willing to look at more stuff if both precision and recall get better. Questions? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 29 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries 11-point interpolated average precision Recall Interpolated Precision 0.0 1.00 0.1 0.67 0.2 0.63 0.3 0.55 0.4 0.45 0.5 0.41 0.6 0.36 0.7 0.29 0.8 0.13 0.9 0.10 1.0 0.08 11-point average: ≈ 0.425 How can precision at 0.0 be > 0? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 30 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Averaged 11-point precision/recall graph 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 Recall Precision Compute interpolated precision at recall levels 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, . . . Do this for each of the queries in the evaluation benchmark Average over queries This measure measures performance at all recall levels. The curve is typical of performance levels at TREC. Note that performance is not very good! Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 31 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries ROC curve 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1 − specificity sensitivity(=recall) Similar to precision-recall graph But we are only interested in the small area in the lower left corner. Precision-recall graph “blows up” this area. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 32 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Variance of measures like precision/recall For a test collection, it is usual that a system does badly on some information needs (e.g., P = 0.2 at R = 0.1) and really well on others (e.g., P = 0.95 at R = 0.1). Indeed, it is usually the case that the variance of the same system across queries is much greater than the variance of different systems on the same query. That is, there are easy information needs and hard ones. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 33 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries What we need for a benchmark A collection of documents Documents must be representative of the documents we expect to see in reality. A collection of information needs . . . which we will often incorrectly refer to as queries Information needs must be representative of the information needs we expect to see in reality. Human relevance assessments We need to hire/pay “judges” or assessors to do this. Expensive, time-consuming Judges must be representative of the users we expect to see in reality. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 35 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries First standard relevance benchmark: Cranfield Pioneering: first testbed allowing precise quantitative measures of information retrieval effectiveness Late 1950s, UK 1398 abstracts of aerodynamics journal articles, a set of 225 queries, exhaustive relevance judgments of all query-document-pairs Too small, too untypical for serious IR evaluation today Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 36 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Second-generation relevance benchmark: TREC TREC = Text Retrieval Conference (TREC) Organized by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) TREC is actually a set of several different relevance benchmarks. Best known: TREC Ad Hoc, used for first 8 TREC evaluations between 1992 and 1999 1.89 million documents, mainly newswire articles, 450 information needs No exhaustive relevance judgments – too expensive Rather, NIST assessors’ relevance judgments are available only for the documents that were among the top k returned for some system which was entered in the TREC evaluation for which the information need was developed. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 37 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Standard relevance benchmarks: Others GOV2 Another TREC/NIST collection 25 million web pages Used to be largest collection that is easily available But still 3 orders of magnitude smaller than what Google/Yahoo/MSN index NTCIR: East Asian language and cross-language information retrieval CLEF: Cross Language Evaluation Forum: This evaluation series has concentrated on European languages and cross-language information retrieval. Many others Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 38 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Example of more recent benchmark: ClueWeb datasets Clueweb09: 1 billion web pages, 25 terabytes (compressed: 5 terabyte) collected during January/February 2009 crawl of pages in 10 languages Unique URLs: 4,780,950,903 (325 GB uncompressed, 105 GB compressed) Total Outlinks: 7,944,351,835 (71 GB uncompressed, 24 GB compressed) Clueweb12: 733,019,372 docs, 27.3 TB (5.54 TB compressed) Indexed in Sketch Engine, cf. LREC 2012 paper. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 39 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Validity of relevance assessments Relevance assessments are only usable if they are consistent. If they are not consistent, then there is no “truth” and experiments are not repeatable. How can we measure this consistency or agreement among judges? → Kappa measure Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 40 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Kappa measure Kappa is measure of how much judges agree or disagree. Designed for categorical judgments Corrects for chance agreement P(A) = proportion of time judges agree P(E) = what agreement would we get by chance κ = P(A) − P(E) 1 − P(E) κ =? for (i) chance agreement (ii) total agreement Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 41 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Kappa measure (2) Values of κ in the interval [2/3, 1.0] are seen as acceptable. With smaller values: need to redesign relevance assessment methodology used, etc. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 42 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Calculating the kappa statistic Judge 2 Relevance Yes No Total Judge 1 Yes 300 20 320 Relevance No 10 70 80 Total 310 90 400 Observed proportion of the times the judges agreed P(A) = (300 + 70)/400 = 370/400 = 0.925 Pooled marginals P(nonrelevant) = (80 + 90)/(400 + 400) = 170/800 = 0.2125 P(relevant) = (320 + 310)/(400 + 400) = 630/800 = 0.7878 Probability that the two judges agreed by chance P(E) = P(nonrelevant)2 + P(relevant)2 = 0.21252 + 0.78782 = 0.665 Kappa statistic κ = (P(A) − P(E))/(1 − P(E)) = (0.925 − 0.665)/(1 − 0.665) = 0.776 (still in acceptable range) Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 43 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Interjudge agreement at TREC information number of disagreements need docs judged 51 211 6 62 400 157 67 400 68 95 400 110 127 400 106 Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 44 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Impact of interjudge disagreement Judges disagree a lot. Does that mean that the results of information retrieval experiments are meaningless? No. Large impact on absolute performance numbers Virtually no impact on ranking of systems Supposes we want to know if algorithm A is better than algorithm B. An information retrieval experiment will give us a reliable answer to this question. . . . . . even if there is a lot of disagreement between judges. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 45 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Evaluation at large search engines Recall is difficult to measure on the web Search engines often use precision at top k, e.g., k = 10 . . . . . . or use measures that reward you more for getting rank 1 right than for getting rank 10 right. Search engines also use non-relevance-based measures. Example 1: clickthrough on first result Not very reliable if you look at a single clickthrough (you may realize after clicking that the summary was misleading and the document is nonrelevant). . . . . . but pretty reliable in the aggregate. Example 2: Ongoing studies of user behavior in the lab – recall last lecture Example 3: A/B testing Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 46 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries A/B testing Purpose: Test a single innovation Prerequisite: You have a large search engine up and running. Have most users use old system Divert a small proportion of traffic (e.g., 1%) to the new system that includes the innovation Evaluate with an “automatic” measure like clickthrough on first result Now we can directly see if the innovation does improve user happiness. Probably the evaluation methodology that large search engines trust most Variant: Give users the option to switch to new algorithm/interface Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 47 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Critique of pure relevance We’ve defined relevance for an isolated query-document pair. Alternative definition: marginal relevance The marginal relevance of a document at position k in the result list is the additional information it contributes over and above the information that was contained in documents d1 . . . dk−1. Exercise Why is marginal relevance a more realistic measure of user happiness? Give an example where a non-marginal measure like precision or recall is a misleading measure of user happiness, but marginal relevance is a good measure. In a practical application, what is the difficulty of using marginal measures instead of non-marginal measures? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 48 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Yet another metrics to be used in IR evaluation Tehere are many other evaluation measures in IR. DCG, nDCG: Discounted cumulative gain, normalized Discounted cumulative gain ROC: Receiver operating characteristic or Bref: Bpref computes a preference relation of whether judged relevant documents are retrieved ahead of judged irrelevant documents. Thus, it is based on the relative ranks of judged documents only. Most metrics are implemented and documented in our glorious pv211-utils and their use is supported by tutorials 9still under preparation in the develop branch). Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 49 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries How do we present results to the user? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 51 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries How do we present results to the user? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 52 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries How do we present results to the user? Most often: as a list – aka “10 blue links” How should each document in the list be described? This description is crucial. The user often can identify good hits (= relevant hits) based on the description. No need to actually view any document Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 53 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Doc description in result list Most commonly: doc title, url, some metadata . . . . . . and a summary How do we “compute” the summary? Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 54 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Summaries Two basic kinds: (i) static (ii) dynamic A static summary of a document is always the same, regardless of the query that was issued by the user. Dynamic summaries are query-dependent. They attempt to explain why the document was retrieved for the query at hand. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 55 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Static summaries In typical systems, the static summary is a subset of the document. Simplest heuristic: the first 50 or so words of the document More sophisticated: extract from each document a set of “key” sentences Simple NLP heuristics to score each sentence Summary is made up of top-scoring sentences. Machine learning approach: see IIR 13 Most sophisticated: complex NLP to synthesize/generate a summary For most IR applications: not quite ready for prime time yet Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 56 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Dynamic summaries Present one or more “windows” or snippets within the document that contain several of the query terms. Prefer snippets in which query terms occurred as a phrase Prefer snippets in which query terms occurred jointly in a small window The summary that is computed this way gives the entire content of the window – all terms, not just the query terms. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 57 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Google dynamic summaries for [vegetarian diet running] Good example that snippet selection is non-trivial. Criteria: occurrence of keywords, density of keywords, coherence of snippet, number of different snippets in summary, good cutting points, etc. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 58 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries A dynamic summary Query: [new guinea economic development] Snippets (in bold) that were extracted from a document: . . . In recent years, Papua New Guinea has faced severe economic difficulties and economic growth has slowed, partly as a result of weak governance and civil war, and partly as a result of external factors such as the Bougainville civil war which led to the closure in 1989 of the Panguna mine (at that time the most important foreign exchange earner and contributor to Government finances), the Asian financial crisis, a decline in the prices of gold and copper, and a fall in the production of oil. PNG’s economic development record over the past few years is evidence that governance issues underly many of the country’s problems. Good governance, which may be defined as the transparent and accountable management of human, natural, economic and financial resources for the purposes of equitable and sustainable development, flows from proper public sector management, efficient fiscal and accounting mechanisms, and a willingness to make service delivery a priority in practice. . . . Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 59 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Generating dynamic summaries Where do we get these other terms in the snippet from? We cannot construct a dynamic summary from the positional inverted index – at least not efficiently. We need to cache documents. The positional index tells us: query term occurs at position 4378 in the document. Byte offset or word offset? Note that the cached copy can be outdated Don’t cache very long documents – just cache a short prefix Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 60 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Dynamic summaries Real estate on the search result page is limited → snippets must be short . . . . . . but snippets must be long enough to be meaningful. Snippets should communicate whether and how the document answers the query. Ideally: linguistically well-formed snippets Ideally: the snippet should answer the query, so we don’t have to look at the document. Dynamic summaries are a big part of user happiness because . . . . . . we can quickly scan them to find the relevant document we then click on. . . . in many cases, we don’t have to click at all and save time. Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 61 / 62 Introduction Unranked evaluation Ranked evaluation Benchmarks Result summaries Resources Chapter 8 of IIR Resources at https://www.fi.muni.cz/~sojka/PV211/ and http://cislmu.org, materials in MU IS and FI MU library The TREC home page – TREC had a huge impact on information retrieval evaluation. Originator of F-measure: Keith van Rijsbergen More on A/B testing Too much A/B testing at Google? Tombros & Sanderson 1998: one of the first papers on dynamic summaries Google VP of Engineering on search quality evaluation at Google ClueWeb12 and other datasets available in Sketch Engine Sojka, IIR Group: PV211: Evaluation & Result Summaries 62 / 62