Abstract
Assistance in retrieving documents on the World Wide Web is provided either by search engines, through keyword-based queries, or by catalogues, which organize documents into hierarchical collections. Maintaining catalogues manually is becoming increasingly difficult, due to the sheer amount of material on the Web; it is thus becoming necessary to resort to techniques for the automatic classification of documents. Automatic classification is traditionally performed by extracting the information for representing a document (``indexing'') from the document itself. The paper describes the novel technique of categorization by context, which instead extracts useful information for classifying a document from the context where a URL referring to it appears. We present the results of experimenting with Theseus, a classifier that exploits this technique.
Author supplied keywords
- -based queries
- a document
- amount of material on
- automatic classification i s
- automatic classification of documents
- becoming necessary to resort
- catalogues manually is becoming
- due to the sheer
- from the document itself
- hierarchical collections
- increasingly difficult
- indexing
- it is thus
- maintaining
- or by catalogues
- the information for representing
- the web
- to techniques for the
- traditionally performed by extracting
- which organize documents into
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Attardi, G., Gullì, a, & Sebastiani, F. (1999). Automatic Web Page Categorization by Link and Context Analysis. Proceedings of THAI 99, 105–119. Retrieved from http://wortschatz.uni-leipzig.de/~sbordag/semantische/papers/07/attardi99automatic.pdf
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