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Citation Context and Sentiment Analysis×BM25 Probabilistic Ranking (Okapi)×Mean Average Precision (MAP)×
DziedzinaBibliometriaBibliometriaBibliometria
RodzinaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Rok powstania200620092000
TwórcaSimone Teufel, Advaith Siddharthan & Dan Tidhar (citation function); Awais Athar (citation sentiment)Stephen Robertson; Karen Spärck Jones; Hugo Zaragoza (Okapi team, City University London)TREC / information-retrieval evaluation community; Chris Buckley & Ellen Voorhees (stability analysis)
TypNLP pipeline for classifying the rhetorical function and polarity of citationsProbabilistic term-weighting and document-scoring pipeline for ranked retrievalBinary-relevance ranked-retrieval evaluation pipeline
Źródło pierwotneTeufel, S., Siddharthan, A., & Tidhar, D. (2006). Automatic classification of citation function. In Proceedings of the 2006 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP 2006), 103-110. link ↗Robertson, S., & Zaragoza, H. (2009). The Probabilistic Relevance Framework: BM25 and Beyond. Foundations and Trends in Information Retrieval, 3(4), 333-389. DOI ↗Buckley, C., & Voorhees, E. M. (2000). Evaluating evaluation measure stability. In Proceedings of the 23rd Annual International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval (SIGIR '00), 33-40. DOI ↗
Inne nazwyCitation Function Classification, Citation Polarity Analysis, Citation Sentiment Detection, Citation Context MiningOkapi BM25, Best Matching 25, Probabilistic Relevance Ranking, BM25 Term WeightingMAP, Average Precision, AP, Mean AP
Pokrewne333
PodsumowanieCitation context and sentiment analysis is the scientometric text-mining technique that reads the words around a citation to recover why one paper cites another and with what attitude. Standard citation counting treats every citation as an equal, polarity-free vote, but Simone Teufel, Advaith Siddharthan and Dan Tidhar's 2006 EMNLP work showed that citations serve distinct rhetorical functions — using a method, contrasting with prior work, acknowledging a basis, or merely referencing in passing — and that these functions can be classified automatically from the citing sentence. Awais Athar's 2011 work extended this to sentiment, distinguishing positive, neutral, and negative (critical) citations using sentence-structure features. Together these methods turn the raw citation graph into a typed, sentiment-bearing graph, enabling more meaningful impact measures, better citation indexers, and summaries of how a paper has been received.BM25, the Okapi 'Best Matching 25' function, is the dominant classical ranking function in information retrieval and the workhorse term-weighting scheme behind most lexical search engines and bibliographic databases. Developed by Stephen Robertson, Karen Spärck Jones and colleagues at City University London and formalized in Robertson and Zaragoza's 2009 monograph on the Probabilistic Relevance Framework, BM25 scores a document against a query as a sum, over query terms, of inverse-document-frequency weights multiplied by a saturating, length-normalized transform of within-document term frequency. Two free parameters control how quickly repeated terms stop adding evidence (k1) and how strongly document length is penalized (b). BM25 consistently outperformed plain TF-IDF in the TREC evaluations and remains the standard first-stage retrieval baseline against which modern neural rankers are measured.Mean Average Precision (MAP) is the classic single-number summary of ranked-retrieval effectiveness under binary relevance and the headline metric of the TREC ad hoc retrieval tracks. For a single query, average precision (AP) computes the precision of the result list at each rank where a relevant document appears and averages those values, rewarding systems that rank all relevant documents highly; MAP is then the mean of AP across a set of queries. Buckley and Voorhees's 2000 SIGIR analysis of evaluation-measure stability showed that average precision is among the most stable and discriminating IR measures, requiring fewer queries than alternatives like precision at a fixed cutoff to reliably tell two systems apart. MAP remains a standard reporting metric for ranked retrieval, complementing graded-relevance measures such as nDCG.
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ScholarGatePorównaj metody: Citation Context and Sentiment Analysis · BM25 Probabilistic Ranking (Okapi) · Mean Average Precision (MAP). Pobrano 2026-06-25 z https://scholargate.app/pl/compare