Search
 New @ Now
Products
 FnTs in Business  FnTs in Technology
For Authors
 Review Updates
 Authors Advantages
 Download Style Files
 Submit an article
 

Learning to Rank for Information Retrieval



Author(s): Tie-Yan Liu

Source:
    Journal:Foundations and Trends® in Information Retrieval
    ISSN Print:1554-0669,  ISSN Online:1554-0677
    Publisher:Now Publishers
    Volume 3 Number 3,

Document Type: Article
Pages: 107(225-331)
DOI: 10.1561/1500000016

Abstract:

Learning to rank for Information Retrieval (IR) is a task to automatically construct a ranking model using training data, such that the model can sort new objects according to their degrees of relevance, preference, or importance. Many IR problems are by nature ranking problems, and many IR technologies can be potentially enhanced by using learning-to-rank techniques. The objective of this tutorial is to give an introduction to this research direction. Specifically, the existing learning-to-rank algorithms are reviewed and categorized into three approaches: the pointwise, pairwise, and listwise approaches. The advantages and disadvantages with each approach are analyzed, and the relationships between the loss functions used in these approaches and IR evaluation measures are discussed. Then the empirical evaluations on typical learning-to-rank methods are shown, with the LETOR collection as a benchmark dataset, which seems to suggest that the listwise approach be the most effective one among all the approaches. After that, a statistical ranking theory is introduced, which can describe different learning-to-rank algorithms, and be used to analyze their query-level generalization abilities. At the end of the tutorial, we provide a summary and discuss potential future work on learning to rank.