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  2. Document retrieval - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_retrieval

    Most content based document retrieval systems use an inverted index algorithm. A signature file is a technique that creates a quick and dirty filter, for example a Bloom filter , that will keep all the documents that match to the query and hopefully a few ones that do not.

  3. Document-oriented database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document-oriented_database

    A document-oriented database is a specialized key-value store, which itself is another NoSQL database category. In a simple key-value store, the document content is opaque. A document-oriented database provides APIs or a query/update language that exposes the ability to query or update based on the internal structure in the document. This ...

  4. Information retrieval - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_retrieval

    1983: Salton (and Michael J. McGill) published Introduction to Modern Information Retrieval (McGraw-Hill), with heavy emphasis on vector models. 1985: David Blair and Bill Maron publish: An Evaluation of Retrieval Effectiveness for a Full-Text Document-Retrieval System mid-1980s: Efforts to develop end-user versions of commercial IR systems.

  5. Document retrieval system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Document_retrieval...

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  6. XML retrieval - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XML_Retrieval

    Ranking in XML-Retrieval can incorporate both content relevance and structural similarity, which is the resemblance between the structure given in the query and the structure of the document. Also, the retrieval units resulting from an XML query may not always be entire documents, but can be any deeply nested XML elements, i.e. dynamic documents.

  7. Document clustering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_clustering

    For document clustering, one of the most common ways to generate features for a document is to calculate the term frequencies of all its tokens. Although not perfect, these frequencies can usually provide some clues about the topic of the document. And sometimes it is also useful to weight the term frequencies by the inverse document frequencies.

  8. Document management system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_management_system

    A document management system (DMS) is usually a computerized system used to store, share, track and manage files or documents. Some systems include history tracking where a log of the various versions created and modified by different users is recorded. The term has some overlap with the concepts of content management systems.

  9. Relevance (information retrieval) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relevance_(information...

    The information retrieval community has emphasized the use of test collections and benchmark tasks to measure topical relevance, starting with the Cranfield Experiments of the early 1960s and culminating in the TREC evaluations that continue to this day as the main evaluation framework for information retrieval research.