Entropy and Graph Based Modelling of Document Coherence using Discourse Entities: An Application to IR

Casper Petersen, Christina Lioma, Jakob Grue Simonsen, Birger Larsen

Research output: Contribution to book/anthology/report/conference proceedingArticle in proceedingResearchpeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We present two novel models of document coherence and their application to information retrieval (IR). Both models approximate document coherence using discourse entities, e.g. the subject or object of a sentence. Our first model views text as a Markov process generating sequences of discourse entities (entity n-grams); we use the entropy of these entity n-grams to approximate the rate at which new information appears in text, reasoning that as more new words appear, the topic increasingly drifts and text coherence decreases. Our second model extends the work of Guinaudeau & Strube [28] that represents text as a graph of discourse entities, linked by different relations, such as their distance or adjacency in text. We use several graph topology metrics to approximate different aspects of the discourse flow that can indicate coherence, such as the average clustering or betweenness of discourse entities in text. Experiments with several instantiations of these models show that: (i) our models perform on a par with two other well-known models of text coherence even without any parameter tuning, and (ii) reranking retrieval results according to their coherence scores gives notable performance gains, confirming a relation between document coherence and relevance. This work contributes two novel models of document coherence, the application of which to IR complements recent work in the integration of document cohesiveness or comprehensibility to ranking [5, 56].
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationICTIR '15 Proceedings of the 2015 International Conference on The Theory of Information Retrieval
Number of pages10
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publication date2015
Pages191-200
ISBN (Print)978-1-4503-3833-2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015
EventICTIR - Northampton, United States
Duration: 27 Sept 201530 Sept 2015

Conference

ConferenceICTIR
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityNorthampton
Period27/09/201530/09/2015

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Entropy and Graph Based Modelling of Document Coherence using Discourse Entities: An Application to IR'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this