100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Text Retrieval & Mining Summary

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
19
Uploaded on
01-06-2024
Written in
2023/2024

This comprehensive handwritten summary on Text Retrieval and Mining covers essential concepts from both lectures and tutorials. Key topics include Bag-of-Words models, TF-IDF, text processing techniques, POS tagging, constituency parsing, named entity recognition, and entity linking. It also explores advanced methods like topic modeling with Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) and BERTopic, as well as word embeddings using GloVe and Word2Vec. The notes delve into natural language processing with deep learning, discussing N-gram language models, text generation, and encoder-decoder architectures. Finally, the summary addresses information retrieval, including the anatomy of retrieval and scoring, and methods for evaluating retrieval effectiveness.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
June 1, 2024
Number of pages
19
Written in
2023/2024
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Text Retrieval & Mining
Week 1: Bag of Words
Bag-of-Words is a family of text representations, where text vectors are built by
observing and counting the words that appear in a text.

We study 2 types of BoW vectors:

 Raw Count: actually count the number of occurrences of each word in a text
 TF-IDF: adjust the raw count to favour words that appear a lot in a few
documents, as opposed to those who appear a lot in all documents

Definitions
Document and Corpus:

• Document is the smallest unit of text of your use case

• Corpus is your collection of documents

• Use case: think of the typical question you are looking the answer to

• Query: the text you will use to search in your corpus

Vocabulary (or Dictionary): all unique terms appearing in a corpus, with size V := the
number of unique word

Token: a unit of text e.g. word, punctuation

Corpus Frequency: the number of times a word appears of all texts

Term Frequency (in a document): the number of times a word appears in ONE
document

Document Frequency: the number of documents (texts) a word appears in

Term: a single word, a lemma or stem of a word, an N – gram

Tokenizer: a program that takes in a text and splits it into smaller units. Once a text is
tokenized into sentences, you can tokenize sentences into words.

Examples of Python Tokenizers:

• NLTK: sentence & word tokenizer
• SpaCy: sentence & word tokenizer

,Bag of Words
For each document (text):

• Create a vector of dimension V
• Token count in document given per token, total number of tokens = V (the
number of unique words/tokens in the corpus)
• Only show tokens with count > 0

Example:

Sentence 1: “the cat sat on the hat”

Sentence 2: “the dog ate the cat and the hat”

Vocabulary: [and, ate, cat, dog, hat, on, sat, the] (8 unique words)

BoW 1: [0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, 2]

BoW 2: [1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 3]

TF-IDF
 TF – Term Frequency
 IDF – inverse of document frequency (DF)

𝑇𝐹 − 𝐼𝐷𝐹(𝑡𝑒𝑟𝑚, 𝑑𝑜𝑐𝑢𝑚𝑒𝑛𝑡, 𝑐𝑜𝑟𝑝𝑢𝑠) = 𝑇𝐹 ⋅ 𝐼𝐷𝐹

Looking at the specificity of the word

High value: a word that appears in the document but not a lot in overall corpus

Low value: a word that appears in the document, but also in many others in the corpus

Text Processing
• Stopping: removing stopwords
o Stopwords: a set of commonly used words in a language but carry very
little useful information e.g. personal pronouns, definite & indefinite
articles
o Removed based on a pre-established lists
• Filter by Token Pattern
o Accept only words that correspond to a regular expression pattern.
• Filter by Frequency
o Retain only the top N tokens, based on the number of times they appear
in the complete corpus.
o Use the max_features argument of the vectorizer.
• Filter by Document Frequency
o Two corner cases to consider:


2

, ▪a word appears in nearly all documents: does not participate
actively to make a difference between documents
▪ a word appears only in 1 or 2 documents: It is likely a typo, or a
one-off e.g. Review by John, Jane’s opinion
o Use the min_df and max_df arguments:
▪ min_df = 3 words that appear in more than 3 documents will be
in the vocabulary
▪ min_df = 0.1 words that appear in more than 10% of the
documents will be in the vocabulary

Example

from nltk.corpus import stopwords
stops = stopwords.words('english')
count = CountVectorizer(
stop_words=stops,
token_pattern=r'[a-z]+\w*',
max_features=50000,
min_df=5,
max_df=0.8
)


• Stemming: removing plurals, conjugation
o ‘cats’  ‘cat’, ‘making’  ‘mak’
o Stem  Word
o Stemmers: Porter, Snowball
• Lemmatizing: like stemming, but to a word
o ‘cats’  ‘cat’, ‘making’  ‘make’
o Lemma = Word
o Slower than stemming
o Lemmatizers: WordNet, SpaCy
• N – Grams: groups of N consecutive words in the text
o Importance: Bag of Words vectors ignore word order in a sentence. But it
makes sense that some information is communicated through some
words being side-by-side rather than these words being in the sentence. It
carries more information to know that new york is in a sentence, opposed
to knowing that both new and york are in the sentence, without knowing
that they are side by side. Similarity = Cosine similarity of BoW. It justifies
having a dimension of the BoW vectors that encodes the facts that some
words are side-by-side.
o 2 – grams: ‘New York’, ‘Greta Thunberg’
o 3 – grams: ‘New York City’, ‘Limited Liability Corporation’




3
R182,85
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
lucia2001

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
lucia2001 Universiteit van Amsterdam
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
2
Member since
3 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
5
Last sold
6 months ago

0,0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can immediately select a different document that better matches what you need.

Pay how you prefer, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card or EFT and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions