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    J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2007 Mar-Apr;14(2):164-74. Epub 2007 Jan 9.

    A comparative evaluation of full-text, concept-based, and context-sensitive search.

    Source

    Medical Informatics Research Center, Department of Information Systems Engineering, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel, P.O.B. 653, Beer Sheva 84105, Israel. robertmo@bgu.ac.il

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVES:

    Study comparatively (1) concept-based search, using documents pre-indexed by a conceptual hierarchy; (2) context-sensitive search, using structured, labeled documents; and (3) traditional full-text search. Hypotheses were: (1) more contexts lead to better retrieval accuracy; and (2) adding concept-based search to the other searches would improve upon their baseline performances.

    DESIGN:

    Use our Vaidurya architecture, for search and retrieval evaluation, of structured documents classified by a conceptual hierarchy, on a clinical guidelines test collection.

    MEASUREMENTS:

    Precision computed at different levels of recall to assess the contribution of the retrieval methods. Comparisons of precisions done with recall set at 0.5, using t-tests.

    RESULTS:

    Performance increased monotonically with the number of query context elements. Adding context-sensitive elements, mean improvement was 11.1% at recall 0.5. With three contexts, mean query precision was 42% +/- 17% (95% confidence interval [CI], 31% to 53%); with two contexts, 32% +/- 13% (95% CI, 27% to 38%); and one context, 20% +/- 9% (95% CI, 15% to 24%). Adding context-based queries to full-text queries monotonically improved precision beyond the 0.4 level of recall. Mean improvement was 4.5% at recall 0.5. Adding concept-based search to full-text search improved precision to 19.4% at recall 0.5.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    The study demonstrated usefulness of concept-based and context-sensitive queries for enhancing the precision of retrieval from a digital library of semi-structured clinical guideline documents. Concept-based searches outperformed free-text queries, especially when baseline precision was low. In general, the more ontological elements used in the query, the greater the resulting precision.

    PMID:
    17213502
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC2213470
    Free PMC Article

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