Queries entered in a search box are the results of users' activities to actively seek information. Therefore, search logs are important data which represent users' information needs. The purpose of this study is to examine if there is a relationship between the results of queries automatically classified and the categories of documents accessed. Search sessions were identified in 2009 NDSL(National Discovery for Science Leaders) log dataset of KISTI (Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information). Queries and items used were extracted by session. The queries were processed using an automatic classifier. The identified queries were then compared with the subject categories of items used. As a result, it was found that the average similarity was 58.8% for the automatic classification of the top 100 queries. Interestingly, this result is a numerical value lower than 76.8%, the result of search evaluated by experts. The reason for this difference explains that the terms used as queries are newly emerging as those of concern in other fields of research.
Named entity recognition is required to improve the retrieval accuracy of patent documents or similar patents in the claims and patent descriptions. In this paper, we proposed an automatic named entity recognition for patents by using a conditional random field that is one of the best methods in machine learning research. Named entity recognition system has been constructed from the training set of tagged corpus with 660,000 words and 70,000 words are used as a test set for evaluation. The experiment shows that the accuracy is 93.6% and the Kappa coefficient is 0.67 between manual tagging and automatic tagging system. This figure is better than the Kappa coefficient 0.6 for manually tagged results and it shows that automatic named entity tagging system can be used as a practical tagging for patent documents in replacement of a manual tagging.
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