This document provides a high-level summary of the key components and processes involved in search engine architecture and functionality. It describes the indexing process including text acquisition, transformation and indexing. It also outlines the query process, including user interaction, ranking and evaluation. Key details are provided about text acquisition, transformation, indexing creation, ranking and user interaction. The document explains that the course will provide more details on the components and techniques used in modern search engines.
This document provides a high-level summary of the key components and processes involved in search engine architecture and functionality. It describes the indexing process including text acquisition, transformation and indexing. It also outlines the query process, including user interaction, ranking and evaluation. Key details are provided about text acquisition, transformation, indexing creation, ranking and user interaction. The document explains that the course will provide more details on the components and techniques used in modern search engines.
Search Engine Architecture • A software architecture consists of software components, the interfaces provided by those components, and the relationships between them – describes a system at a particular level of abstraction • Architecture of a search engine determined by 2 requirements – effectiveness (quality of results) and efficiency (response time and throughput) Indexing Process Indexing Process • Text acquisition – identifies and stores documents for indexing • Text transformation – transforms documents into index terms or features • Index creation – takes index terms and creates data structures (indexes) to support fast searching Query Process Query Process • User interaction – supports creation and refinement of query, display of results • Ranking – uses query and indexes to generate ranked list of documents • Evaluation – monitors and measures effectiveness and efficiency (primarily offline) Details: Text Acquisition • Crawler – Identifies and acquires documents for search engine – Many types – web, enterprise, desktop – Web crawlers follow links to find documents • Must efficiently find huge numbers of web pages (coverage) and keep them up-to-date (freshness) • Single site crawlers for site search • Topical or focused crawlers for vertical search – Document crawlers for enterprise and desktop search • Follow links and scan directories Text Acquisition • Feeds – Real-time streams of documents • e.g., web feeds for news, blogs, video, radio, tv – RSS is common standard • RSS “reader” can provide new XML documents to search engine • Conversion – Convert variety of documents into a consistent text plus metadata format • e.g. HTML, XML, Word, PDF, etc. → XML – Convert text encoding for different languages • Using a Unicode standard like UTF-8 Text Acquisition • Document data store – Stores text, metadata, and other related content for documents • Metadata is information about document such as type and creation date • Other content includes links, anchor text – Provides fast access to document contents for search engine components • e.g. result list generation – Could use relational database system • More typically, a simpler, more efficient storage system is used due to huge numbers of documents Text Transformation • Parser – Processing the sequence of text tokens in the document to recognize structural elements • e.g., titles, links, headings, etc. – Tokenizer recognizes “words” in the text • must consider issues like capitalization, hyphens, apostrophes, non-alpha characters, separators – Markup languages such as HTML, XML often used to specify structure • Tags used to specify document elements – E.g., <h2> Overview </h2> • Document parser uses syntax of markup language (or other formatting) to identify structure Text Transformation • Stopping – Remove common words • e.g., “and”, “or”, “the”, “in” – Some impact on efficiency and effectiveness – Can be a problem for some queries • Stemming – Group words derived from a common stem • e.g., “computer”, “computers”, “computing”, “compute” – Usually effective, but not for all queries – Benefits vary for different languages Text Transformation • Link Analysis – Makes use of links and anchor text in web pages – Link analysis identifies popularity and community information • e.g., PageRank – Anchor text can significantly enhance the representation of pages pointed to by links – Significant impact on web search • Less importance in other applications Text Transformation • Information Extraction – Identify classes of index terms that are important for some applications – e.g., named entity recognizers identify classes such as people, locations, companies, dates, etc. • Classifier – Identifies class-related metadata for documents • i.e., assigns labels to documents • e.g., topics, reading levels, sentiment, genre – Use depends on application Index Creation • Document Statistics – Gathers counts and positions of words and other features – Used in ranking algorithm • Weighting – Computes weights for index terms – Used in ranking algorithm – e.g., tf.idf weight • Combination of term frequency in document and inverse document frequency in the collection Index Creation • Inversion – Core of indexing process – Converts document-term information to term- document for indexing • Difficult for very large numbers of documents – Format of inverted file is designed for fast query processing • Must also handle updates • Compression used for efficiency Index Creation • Index Distribution – Distributes indexes across multiple computers and/or multiple sites – Essential for fast query processing with large numbers of documents – Many variations • Document distribution, term distribution, replication – P2P and distributed IR involve search across multiple sites User Interaction • Query input – Provides interface and parser for query language – Most web queries are very simple, other applications may use forms – Query language used to describe more complex queries and results of query transformation • e.g., Boolean queries, Indri and Galago query languages • similar to SQL language used in database applications • IR query languages also allow content and structure specifications, but focus on content User Interaction • Query transformation – Improves initial query, both before and after initial search – Includes text transformation techniques used for documents – Spell checking and query suggestion provide alternatives to original query – Query expansion and relevance feedback modify the original query with additional terms User Interaction • Results output – Constructs the display of ranked documents for a query – Generates snippets to show how queries match documents – Highlights important words and passages – Retrieves appropriate advertising in many applications – May provide clustering and other visualization tools Ranking • Scoring – Calculates scores for documents using a ranking algorithm – Core component of search engine – Basic form of score is qi di • qi and di are query and document term weights for term i – Many variations of ranking algorithms and retrieval models Ranking • Performance optimization – Designing ranking algorithms for efficient processing • Term-at-a time vs. document-at-a-time processing • Safe vs. unsafe optimizations • Distribution – Processing queries in a distributed environment – Query broker distributes queries and assembles results – Caching is a form of distributed searching Evaluation • Logging – Logging user queries and interaction is crucial for improving search effectiveness and efficiency – Query logs and clickthrough data used for query suggestion, spell checking, query caching, ranking, advertising search, and other components • Ranking analysis – Measuring and tuning ranking effectiveness • Performance analysis – Measuring and tuning system efficiency How Does It Really Work? • This course explains these components of a search engine in more detail • Often many possible approaches and techniques for a given component – Focus is on the most important alternatives – i.e., explain a small number of approaches in detail rather than many approaches – “Importance” based on research results and use in actual search engines – Alternatives described in references