Unbiased Comparative Evaluation of Ranking Functions

April 25, 2016 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› International Conference on the Theory of Information Retrieval

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Authors Tobias Schnabel, Adith Swaminathan, Peter Frazier, Thorsten Joachims arXiv ID 1604.07209 Category cs.IR: Information Retrieval Cross-listed cs.LG Citations 27 Venue International Conference on the Theory of Information Retrieval Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Eliciting relevance judgments for ranking evaluation is labor-intensive and costly, motivating careful selection of which documents to judge. Unlike traditional approaches that make this selection deterministically, probabilistic sampling has shown intriguing promise since it enables the design of estimators that are provably unbiased even when reusing data with missing judgments. In this paper, we first unify and extend these sampling approaches by viewing the evaluation problem as a Monte Carlo estimation task that applies to a large number of common IR metrics. Drawing on the theoretical clarity that this view offers, we tackle three practical evaluation scenarios: comparing two systems, comparing $k$ systems against a baseline, and ranking $k$ systems. For each scenario, we derive an estimator and a variance-optimizing sampling distribution while retaining the strengths of sampling-based evaluation, including unbiasedness, reusability despite missing data, and ease of use in practice. In addition to the theoretical contribution, we empirically evaluate our methods against previously used sampling heuristics and find that they generally cut the number of required relevance judgments at least in half.
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