Hi,
Unfortunately search queries may contain private sensitive information
that cannot be disclosed automatically[1].
However you can have a look at some notes from Trey[2] and more
specially this one[3]
Measuring an IR system efficiency is a tough task and does not only
require access to query logs. We are currently building a set of tools
to help us in offline evaluation of the system[4]. While it may be
difficult for you to run them on your own system it can give you a rough
idea of how we are trying to address this problem.
One of these tools has not yet been announced and will probably address
your needs.
[1]
CCing the Search and Discovery list.
On Sun, May 8, 2016 at 12:24 PM, Stan Zonov <stanzon(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi!
I have been trying to gage the speed/efficiency of a database I have setup.
In order to test it, I have filled it with a lot of wikipedia articles from
a specific category (for example history). The database does multi-word
queries and returns the articles that best match the multiword query. For
example if I search up "history in Italy in the past 100 years" then the
best matching articles should pop up.
I was wondering if anyone has any advice how to form sample test queries to
model realistic situations/queries. I don't think it would be fair to do
random phrases (such as "banana the string") and wanted to model queries
based on my data to test performance and correctness of output. Does anyone
have any advice? How or Is this done at wikipedia?
I have looked here
(
http://blog.wikimedia.org/2012/09/19/what-are-readers-looking-for-wikipedia…)
but the data has been down for a while.
Cheers,
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