Hierarchical re-estimation of topic models for measuring topical diversity

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Abstract

A high degree of topical diversity is often considered to be an important characteristic of interesting text documents. A recent proposal for measuring topical diversity identifies three elements for assessing diversity: words, topics, and documents as collections of words. Topic models play a central role in this approach. Using standard topic models for measuring diversity of documents is suboptimal due to generality and impurity. General topics only include common information from a background corpus and are assigned to most of the documents in the collection. Impure topics contain words that are not related to the topic; impurity lowers the interpretability of topic models and impure topics are likely to get assigned to documents erroneously. We propose a hierarchical re-estimation approach for topic models to combat generality and impurity; the proposed approach operates at three levels: words, topics, and documents. Our re-estimation approach for measuring documents’ topical diversity outperforms the state of the art on PubMed dataset which is commonly used for diversity experiments.

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Azarbonyad, H., Dehghani, M., Kenter, T., Marx, M., Kamps, J., & de Rijke, M. (2017). Hierarchical re-estimation of topic models for measuring topical diversity. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 10193 LNCS, pp. 68–81). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-56608-5_6

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