Clustering of web search results based on the cuckoo search algorithm and Balanced Bayesian Information Criterion

The clustering of web search results – or web document clustering – has become a very interesting research area among academic and scientific communities involved in information retrieval. Web search result clustering systems, also called Web Clustering Engines, seek to increase the coverage of docu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInformation sciences Vol. 281; pp. 248 - 264
Main Authors Cobos, Carlos, Muñoz-Collazos, Henry, Urbano-Muñoz, Richar, Mendoza, Martha, León, Elizabeth, Herrera-Viedma, Enrique
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Inc 10.10.2014
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ISSN0020-0255
1872-6291
DOI10.1016/j.ins.2014.05.047

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Summary:The clustering of web search results – or web document clustering – has become a very interesting research area among academic and scientific communities involved in information retrieval. Web search result clustering systems, also called Web Clustering Engines, seek to increase the coverage of documents presented for the user to review, while reducing the time spent reviewing them. Several algorithms for clustering web results already exist, but results show room for more to be done. This paper introduces a new description-centric algorithm for the clustering of web results, called WDC-CSK, which is based on the cuckoo search meta-heuristic algorithm, k-means algorithm, Balanced Bayesian Information Criterion, split and merge methods on clusters, and frequent phrases approach for cluster labeling. The cuckoo search meta-heuristic provides a combined global and local search strategy in the solution space. Split and merge methods replace the original Lévy flights operation and try to improve existing solutions (nests), so they can be considered as local search methods. WDC-CSK includes an abandon operation that provides diversity and prevents the population nests from converging too quickly. Balanced Bayesian Information Criterion is used as a fitness function and allows defining the number of clusters automatically. WDC-CSK was tested with four data sets (DMOZ-50, AMBIENT, MORESQUE and ODP-239) over 447 queries. The algorithm was also compared against other established web document clustering algorithms, including Suffix Tree Clustering (STC), Lingo, and Bisecting k-means. The results show a considerable improvement upon the other algorithms as measured by recall, F-measure, fall-out, accuracy and SSLk.
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ISSN:0020-0255
1872-6291
DOI:10.1016/j.ins.2014.05.047