Title : Studying Topical Relevance with Evidence-based Crowdsourcing

Presenter Oana Inel
Abstract Information Retrieval systems rely on large test collections to measure their effectiveness in retrieving relevant documents. While the demand is high, the task of creating such test collections is laborious due to the large amounts of data that need to be annotated, and due to the intrinsic subjectivity of the task itself. In this paper we study the topical relevance from a user perspective by addressing the problems of subjectivity and ambiguity. We compare our approach and results with the established TREC annotation guidelines and results. The comparison is based on a series of crowdsourcing pilots experimenting with variables, such as relevance scale, document granularity, annotation template and the number of workers. Our results show correlation between relevance assessment accuracy and smaller document granularity, i.e., aggregation of relevance on paragraph level results in a better relevance accuracy, compared to assessment done at the level of the full document. As expected, our results also show that collecting binary relevance judgments results in a higher accuracy compared to the ternary scale used in the TREC annotation guidelines. Finally, the crowdsourced annotation tasks provided a more accurate document relevance ranking than a single assessor relevance label. This work resulted is a reliable test collection around the TREC Common Core track.

Title : Overcoming the Cold Start Problem for Personalized Reinforcement Learning

Presenter Amin Tabatabaei
Abstract A problem that all data-driven approaches for personalization suffer from is the cold start problem: in the beginning, very few experiences with the user are available, making it nearly impossible to provide a good level of personalization while this is precisely the period where the user should become engaged. In this talk, I will explain a new approach that improves the speed and the performance of reinforcement learning in the context of personalization.