International Journal of Emerging Trends & Technology in Computer Science (IJETTCS)
Web Site: www.ijettcs.org Email: editor@ijettcs.org, editorijettcs@gmail.com
Volume 3, Issue 2, March – April 2014 ISSN 2278-6856
International Journal of Emerging Trends & Technology in Computer Science (IJETTCS)
Web Site: www.ijettcs.org Email: editor@ijettcs.org, editorijettcs@gmail.com
Volume 3, Issue 2, March – April 2014 ISSN 2278-6856
International Journal of Emerging Trends & Technology in Computer Science (IJETTCS)
Web Site: www.ijettcs.org Email: editor@ijettcs.org, editorijettcs@gmail.com
Volume 3, Issue 2, March – April 2014 ISSN 2278-6856
International Journal of Emerging Trends & Technology in Computer Science (IJETTCS)
Web Site: www.ijettcs.org Email: editor@ijettcs.org, editorijettcs@gmail.com
Volume 3, Issue 2, March – April 2014 ISSN 2278-6856
International Journal of EmergingTrends & Technology in Computer Science(IJETTCS)
Web Site: www.ijettcs.org Email: editor@ijettcs.org, editorijettcs@gmail.com
Volume 3, Issue 2, March April 2014 ISSN 2278-6856
Volume 3, Issue 2 March April 2014 Page 21
Abstract: It is duty of Search engines to understand the taste of user and provide them results. It is not practical to request feedback on searchers perceptions and search outcomes directly from users, Search engines should be capable of estimating the satisfaction of user from behavioral signals including query refinement, result clicks and dwell times. This analysis of behavior in the aggregate leads to the development of global metrics such as satisfied result click through (typically operational zed as result page clicks with dwell time exceeding a particular threshold) that are then applied to all searchers behavior to estimate satisfaction levels. There different kinds of people around the world with large differences in their ideologies and tastes. In this paper we model the search according to their needs based on analyzing the history of their searches.
Keywords: Semantic Web, Ontology, Relevance Based Search, Content Based Search.
1. INTRODUCTION Internet is place where data can be found enormously. The network information grows exponentially due to this. A search engine is a tool which is mainly used to fetch data from such a big ocean of internet that enables users to locate information on the World Wide Web. II. It makes user to use more time to deal with the information they are not interested in. Against the background, personalized meta-search engine is one way to solve the problem. The meaning of personalization is, search engine that can help users to sort important information for them by using user's interest. Search engine will get the users' interest at the beginning of the results, so it is very convenient for users to access useful information. In this paper we introduce the design and implementation of meta-search engine. We propose a personalized search approach that can easily extend a conventional search engine on the client side. This paper suggests a new approach that is based on some model which considers semantic aspects and uses them to implement a Meta- Search Engine.
2. RELATED WORKS There are a number of areas of related work relevant to the research described in this paper. These include methods and metrics for the evaluation of search systems, and inferring satisfaction and result relevance from observed search behavior, including individual actions and connected sequences of search behavior. Search systems are traditionally evaluated using the classical methodology involving a collection of documents, a set of pre-defined queries, and relevance judgments provided by human judges for subsets of the collection with respect to the queries. The performance of search systems in retrieving relevant content from the collection and ranking it appropriately is determined using retrieval metrics such as MAP and NDCG. These metrics employ a user model of how searchers inspect the result sets presented to them and compute estimates of relevance and relevance gain at different rank positions. These metrics are query based and ignore the connection between multiple queries occurring in a search session. The relevance judgments that these methods use are also expensive to collect and potentially noisy given that the third-party judges have limited knowledge of users underlying search intent. It is therefore preferable to explore other methods of measuring engine performance, especially those that have lower cost, are more scalable, and are sourced from searchers not third-party judges. Initial work on implicit feedback focused on client-side monitoring of events such as document retention as well as dwell time estimates associating the amount of time spent examining a document with that documents relevance. Moving from laboratory settings to Web-scale experimentation, implicit feedback also has utility in providing training data for learning-to rank algorithms and inferring search preferences. Radlinski et al. Showed that interleaving the results of two ranking functions and presenting the interleaved results to users can serve as a good predictor of relative search engine performance.
3 PROPOSED SYSTEM In the proposed system, we propose a content ontology to accommodate the extracted content and location concepts as well as the relationships among the concepts. We introduce different entropies to indicate the amount of concepts associated with a query and how much a user is interested in these concepts. With the entropies, we are able to estimate the effectiveness of personalization for different users and different queries. 3.1 Design
Relevancy Based Content Search in Semantic Web
Vinotha S.R 1 , Vikneshwaran J K 2 and Prashanth S 3
1,2&3 Dhanalakshmi College of Engineering, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Chennai, TamilNadu, India International Journal of EmergingTrends & Technology in Computer Science(IJETTCS) Web Site: www.ijettcs.org Email: editor@ijettcs.org, editorijettcs@gmail.com Volume 3, Issue 2, March April 2014 ISSN 2278-6856
Volume 3, Issue 2 March April 2014 Page 22
From the experiments made on the ontological implementation of search engines, it was able to achieve 90% of desired result and the search engine built by this methodology paves way for more technical and logical enhancements in innovation of technology. Here the taste and preferences of the user were largely able to achieve based on the study. Technical implementation of study of people taste is achieved by the code which stands in browser and observes the users wish in searching the content. This stood as a great support in reading the minds of the user for providing better result logically and technically.
3.2 Procedure This system consists of a PHP front with the composition of the background html program. The user interface using PHP production is used with the user interaction, the system obtains the keywords entered by the user. It then turns the query to the URL that can get results from Google. Then the page crawling module will search request processing module based on the module generated by the URL of the web pages to crawl. Due to the page coming from different sources (respectively from Google), each page is independently analyzed by engine. This is page by page analysis engine module to extract the key content, such as extracting the results of each of the page URL, title, and text descriptions. Then word segmentation results are achieved by the page analysis module. Result modelling module will use the result of English word segmentation. Otherwise, the result modelling will use the vector directly. Then the system will get the user's interest vector, this vector will use to calculate cosines of angel between result vector and user vector. The system will use these values to sort the results and feedback to users.
4. Conclusion Looking back at the evaluation of investigations into Ontology based search it has been interesting to see the depth of interoperability that was able to achieve. The size/time to create search engine coupled with facility of user oriented ontology factor is large, but it provides best user experience and satisfaction. It is the platform that will improve over time and the adoption of this technology in modern web applications would yield a greater result of efficiency. Such detailed note has been implemented in this project where the data request from the beginning of search to receiving data are completely packed for best performance. It provides vast application in various domain right from social networking to public uses. It could be adopted in any government operations for searching any legal records. It can also be used for accessing files of any type with great security. The accuracy and speed of retrieval either in form of text or files been sent is the big advantage of this project or contributes to further innovation in larger level.
References [1] J . Cardoso, Idea Group, Inc. Semantic Web Services Theory, Tools, and Applications, 2007. [2] T. Berners-Lee, J . Hendler, and O. Lassila, The SemanticWeb, Scientific Am. Magazine, vol. 284, no. 5, pp. 34-43, 2001. [3] M. Burstein, C. Bussler, M. Zaremba, T. Finin, M.N. Huhns, M. Paolucci, A.P. Sheth, and S. illiams, A Semantic Web Services Architecture, IEEE Internet Computing, vol. 9, no. 5, pp. 72-81, Sept./Oct. 2005 [4] Web Ontology Language for Services (OWL-S), W3C Member Submission, http://www.w3.org/Submission/OWL-S/, 2004.
AUTHOR S.R. Vinotha working as an Assistant Professor in the Department of CSE ,Dhanalakshmi College of Engineering, Chennai, India. She received her BE (CSE) fromErode Sengunthar Engineering College, Perundurai and ME (CSE) from National Engineering College, Kovilpatti in 2009. She has five years of teaching experience in the Department of Computer Science & Engineering. Her research interests include image processing, web technology, and data mining. She has presented nine papers in national/international conferences conferences and journals.