xCrawl: A high-recall crawling method for Web mining

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Abstract

Web mining systems exploit the redundancy of data published on the Web to automatically extract information from existing Web documents. The first step in the Information Extraction process is thus to locate as many Web pages as possible that contain relevant information within a limited period of time, a task which is commonly accomplished by applying focused crawling techniques. The performance of such a crawler can be measured by its "recall", i. e., the percentage of documents found and identified as relevant compared to the total number of existing documents. A higher recall value implies that more redundant data are available, which in turn leads to better results in the subsequent fact extraction phase of the Web mining process. In this paper, we propose xCrawl, a new focused crawling method which outperforms state-of-the-art approaches with respect to the recall values achievable within a given period of time. This method is based on a new combination of ideas and techniques used to identify and exploit the navigational structures of Web sites, such as hierarchies, lists, or maps. In addition, automatic query generation is applied to rapidly collect Web sources containing target documents. The proposed crawling technique was inspired by the requirements of a Web mining system developed to extract product and service descriptions given in tabular form and was evaluated in different application scenarios. Comparisons with existing focused crawling techniques reveal that the new crawling method leads to a significant increase in recall while maintaining precision. © 2009 Springer-Verlag London Limited.

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Shchekotykhin, K., Jannach, D., & Friedrich, G. (2010). xCrawl: A high-recall crawling method for Web mining. Knowledge and Information Systems, 25(2), 303–326. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10115-009-0266-3

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