Search (3 results, page 1 of 1)

  • × author_ss:"Losee, R.M."
  • × year_i:[1990 TO 2000}
  1. Losee, R.M.; Haas, S.W.: Sublanguage terms : dictionaries, usage, and automatic classification (1995) 0.01
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    Source
    Journal of the American Society for Information Science. 46(1995) no.7, S.519-529
  2. Losee, R.M.: Determining information retrieval and filtering performance without experimentation (1995) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 2.1996 13:14:10
  3. Haas, S.W.; Losee, R.M.: Looking in text windows : their size and composition (1994) 0.01
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    Abstract
    A text window is a group of words appearing in contiguous positions in text used to exploit a variety of lexical, syntactics, and semantic relationships without having to analyze the text explicitely for their structure. This supports the previously suggested idea that natural grouping of words are best treated as a unit of size 7 to 11 words, that is, plus or minus 3 to 5 words. The text retrieval experiments varying the size of windows, both with full text and with stopwords removed, support these size ranges. The characteristcs of windows that best match terms in queries are examined in detail, revealing intersting differences between those for queries with good results and those for queries with poorer results. Queries with good results tend to contain morte content word phrase and few terms with high frequency of use in the database. Information retrieval systems may benefit from expanding thesaurus-style relationships or incorporating statistical dependencies for terms within these windows