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The Quality of Probabilistic Search in Unstructured Distributed Information Retrieval Systems

Fu, R; (2012) The Quality of Probabilistic Search in Unstructured Distributed Information Retrieval Systems. Doctoral thesis , UCL (University College London). Green open access

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Abstract

Searching the web is critical to the Web's success. However, the frequency of searches together with the size of the index prohibit a single computer being able to cope with the computational load. Consequently, a variety of distributed architectures have been proposed. Commercial search engines such as Google, usually use an architecture where the the index is distributed but centrally managed over a number of disjoint partitions. This centralized architecture has a high capital and operating cost that presents a significant barrier preventing any new competitor from entering the search market. The dominance of a few Web search giants brings concerns about the objectivity of search results and the privacy of the user. A promising solution to eliminate the high cost of entry is to conduct the search on a peer-to-peer (P2P) architecture. Peer-to-peer architectures offer a more geographically dispersed arrangement of machines that are not centrally managed. This has the benefit of not requiring an expensive centralized server facility. However, the lack of a centralized management can complicate the communication process. And the storage and computational capabilities of peers may be much less than for nodes in a commercial search engine. P2P architectures are commonly categorized into two broad classes, structured and unstructured. Structured architectures guarantee that the entire index is searched for a query, but suffer high communication cost during retrieval and maintenance. In comparison, unstructured architectures do not guarantee the entire index is searched, but require less maintenance cost and are more robust to attacks. In this thesis we study the quality of the probabilistic search in an unstructured distributed network since such a network has potential for developing a low cost and robust large scale information retrieval system. Search in an unstructured distributed network is a challenge, since a single machine normally can only store a subset of documents, and a query is only sent to a subset of machines, due to limitations on computational and communication resources. Thus, IR systems built on such network do not guarantee that a query finds the required documents in the collection, and the search has to be probabilistic and non-deterministic. The search quality is measured by a new metric called accuracy, defined as the fraction of documents retrieved by a constrained, probabilistic search compared with those that would have been retrieved by an exhaustive search. We propose a mathematical framework for modeling search in an unstructured distributed network, and present a non-deterministic distributed search architecture called Probably Approximately Correct (PAC) search, We provide formulas to estimate the search quality based on different system parameters, and show that PAC can achieve good performance when using the same amount of resources of a centrally managed deterministic distributed information retrieval system. We also study the effects of node selection in a centralized PAC architecture. We theoretically and empirically analyze the search performance across query iterations, and show that the search accuracy can be improved by caching good performing nodes in a centralized PAC architecture. Experiments on a real document collection and query log support our analysis. We then investigate the effects of different document replication policies in a PAC IR system. We show that the traditional square-root replication policy is not optimum for maximizing accuracy, and give an optimality criterion for accuracy. A non-uniform distribution of documents improves the retrieval performance of popular documents at the expense of less popular documents. To compensate for this, we propose a hybrid replication policy consisting of a combination of uniform and non-uniform distributions. Theoretical and experimental results show that such an arrangement significantly improves the accuracy of less popular documents at the expense of only a small degradation in accuracy averaged over all queries. We finally explore the effects of query caching in the PAC architecture. We empirically analyze the search performance of queries being issued from a query log, and show that the search accuracy can be improved by caching the top-$k$ documents on each node. Simulations on a real document collection and query log support our analysis.

Type: Thesis (Doctoral)
Title: The Quality of Probabilistic Search in Unstructured Distributed Information Retrieval Systems
Open access status: An open access version is available from UCL Discovery
Language: English
Keywords: Distributed Information Retrieval, Peer-to-peer Search
UCL classification: UCL > Provost and Vice Provost Offices
UCL > Provost and Vice Provost Offices > UCL BEAMS
UCL > Provost and Vice Provost Offices > UCL BEAMS > Faculty of Engineering Science
UCL > Provost and Vice Provost Offices > UCL BEAMS > Faculty of Engineering Science > Dept of Computer Science
URI: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1370031
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