This application relates to Ser. No. 10/882,049, filed herewith, titled “Systems and Methods for Natural Language Search,” the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates generally to systems and methods for information retrieval. The present invention relates particularly to systems and methods for category-based search.
Conventional search engines receive a search query from a user and execute a search against a global index. Such conventional search engines typically use one or more conventional methods for performing a search. For example, one known method, described in an article entitled “The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Search Engine,” by Sergey Brin and Lawrence Page, assigns a degree of importance to a document, such as a web page, based on the link structure of the web. The search results are often presented in a list format, including article identifiers and brief snippets about the documents in a web page that can be resized.
A user may also have access to other information stored on the user's local machine or on other storage media accessible via a network. Typically, when searching for information using conventional means, a user enters an explicit search query that comprises keywords and the query is executed against either a global or a local index. The query may also be generated as an implicit query. The information found is output to the user as a result set.
Some conventional search systems allow a user to search by categories. For example, the Google™ search engine allows a user to search using categories by selecting the “Directory” (Google Inc., Mountain View, Calif.; www.google.com). The Yahoo!® search engine allows a user to search by categories, either by selecting a category or by entering an explicit query and being presented with one or more categories in the result set (Yahoo! Inc., Sunnyvale, Calif.; www.yahoo.com). The categories utilized by both of these search engines are static and are edited manually.
Other conventional systems provide simplistic categorization. For example, conventional e-mail systems provide the user with the capability of defining message-handling rules. A rule may specify, for example, that any incoming mail message with “News” in the subject be refilled to a news sub-folder within the user's inbox. Such rules are typically defined manually by the user or by an e-mail administrator.
Embodiments of the present invention provide systems and methods for category-based search. In one embodiment of the present invention, a computer program identifies an article having an attribute, determines a category associated with the article based at least in part on the article attribute, and stores in a data store a data record comprising a category-article pair identifier associated with the category and the article. A search query may be received and executed on a data store comprising the association data record. In response, the association data record is received from the data store. In another embodiment, a computer-readable medium (such as, for example random access memory or a computer disk) comprises code for carrying out such a method.
These exemplary embodiments are mentioned not to limit or define the invention, but to provide examples of embodiments of the invention to aid understanding thereof. Exemplary embodiments are discussed in the Detailed Description, and further description of the invention is provided there. Advantages offered by the various embodiments of the present invention may be further understood by examining this specification.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention are better understood when the following Detailed Description is read with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Embodiments of the present invention provide systems and methods for determining a category for an article and optionally for category-based search. Exemplary embodiments are described below.
Referring now to the drawings in which like numerals indicate like elements throughout the several figures,
The system 100 shown in
The client devices 102a-n shown each comprises a computer-readable medium 108. The embodiment shown comprises a random access memory (RAM) 108 coupled to a processor 110. The processor 110 executes computer-executable program instructions stored in memory 108. Such processors may comprise a microprocessor, an ASIC, a state machine, or other processor, and can be any of a number of computer processors, such as processors from Intel Corporation of Santa Clara, Calif. and Motorola Corporation of Schaumburg, Ill. Such processors comprise, or may be in communication with, media, for example computer-readable media, which stores instructions that, when executed by the processor, cause the processor to perform the steps described herein.
Embodiments of computer-readable media comprise, but are not limited to, an electronic, optical, magnetic, or other storage or transmission device capable of providing a processor, such as the processor 110 of client 102a, with computer-readable instructions. Other examples of suitable media comprise, but are not limited to, a floppy disk, CD-ROM, DVD, magnetic disk, memory chip, ROM, RAM, an ASIC, a configured processor, all optical media, all magnetic tape or other magnetic media, or any other medium from which a computer processor can read instructions. Also, various other forms of computer-readable media may transmit or carry instructions to a computer, including a router, private or public network, or other transmission device or channel, both wired and wireless. The instructions may comprise code from any suitable computer-programming language, including, for example, C, C++, C#, Visual Basic, Java, Python, Perl, and JavaScript.
Client devices 102a-n can be connected to a network 106 as shown, or can be stand-alone machines. Client devices 102a-n may also comprise a number of external or internal devices such as a mouse, a CD-ROM, DVD, a keyboard, a display, or other input or output devices. Examples of client devices 102a-n are personal computers, digital assistants, personal digital assistants, cellular phones, mobile phones, smart phones, pagers, digital tablets, laptop computers, Internet appliances, and other processor-based devices. In general, the client devices 102a-n may be any type of processor-based platform that operates on any operating system, such as Microsoft® Windows® or Linux, capable of supporting one or more client application programs. For example, the client device 102a shown comprises a personal computer executing client application programs, also known as client applications 120. The client applications 120 can be contained in memory 108 and can comprise, for example, a word processing application, a spreadsheet application, an e-mail application, a media player application, an instant messenger application, a presentation application, an Internet browser application, a calendar/organizer application, and any other application or computer program capable of being executed by a client device.
The user 112a can interact with the various client applications 120 and articles associated with the client applications 120 via various input and output devices of the client device 102a. Articles comprise, for example, word processor, spreadsheet, presentation, e-mail, instant messenger, database, and other client application program content files or groups of files, web pages of various formats, such as HTML, XML, eXtensible Hyptertext Markup Language (XHTML), Portable Document Format (PDF) files, and audio files, video files, or any other documents or groups of documents or information of any type whatsoever.
The memory 108 of the client device 102a shown in
The search engine 122 shown contains an indexer 130, a query system 132, and a formatter (not shown). Events, real-time and historical, contextual and indexable, and performance data can be sent by the queue 126 to the query system 132 to provide the query system 132 with information concerning current user context. The query system 132 can use this information to generate an implicit query. The query system 132 can also receive and process explicit queries from the user 112a.
The data store 140 can be any type of computer-readable media and can be integrated with the client device 102a, such as a hard drive, or external to the client device 102a, such as an external hard drive or on another data storage device accessed through the network 106. The data store 140 may comprise any one or combination of methods for storing data, including without limitation, arrays, hash tables, lists, and pairs.
In the embodiment shown in
The result sets comprise one or more article identifiers. An article identifier may be, for example, a Uniform Resource Locator (URL), a file name, a link, an icon, a path for a local file, an index in a database, or any other suitable article identifier. In the embodiment shown, an article identifier comprises a URL associated with an article.
Messaging articles stored in the data store 140 comprise user's emails, chat messages, instant messaging messages, and other types of electronic messages. Each time a message is received, sent, modified, printed, or otherwise accessed, a record is stored in the data store 140. This information can later be searched to identify messages that should be displayed in the user interface.
The data store 140 comprises a local index. The local index in the embodiment shown in
In contrast, a global index may comprise information relevant to many users or many servers, such as, for example, an index of web pages located on multiple servers in communication with the World Wide Web. One example of a global index is an index used by the Google™ search engine to provide search results in response to a search query.
A single index may comprise both a local and a global index. For example, in one embodiment, an index may comprise both local and global information, and include a user or client identifier with the local information so that it may be identified with the user(s) or client(s) to which it pertains. Moreover, an index, local or global, may be present in one or multiple logical or physical locations.
An embodiment of the present invention may also store message threads in the data store 140. In such an embodiment, messages are related together by various attributes, including, for example, the sender, recipient, date/time sent and received, the subject, the content, or any other attribute of the message. The related messages can then be retrieved as a thread, which may be treated as a document by the display processor 128.
The formatter can receive the search result set from the query system 132 of the search engine 122 and can format the results for output to a display processor 128. In one embodiment, the formatter formats the results in eXtensible Markup Language (XML) or Hypertext Markup Language (HTML). The display processor 128 can be contained in memory 108 and can control the display of the result set on a display device associated with the client device 102a. The display processor 128 may comprise various components. For example, in one embodiment, the display processor 128 comprises a Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) server that receives requests for information and responds by constructing and transmitting HTML pages. In one such embodiment, the HTTP server comprises a scaled-down version of the Apache Web server. In various embodiments, the functions described herein may be performed by various other components and devices.
Through the client devices 102a-n, users 112a-n can communicate over the network 106, with each other and with other systems and devices coupled to the network 106. As shown in
The server device 150 shown comprises a server executing a search engine application program, such as the Google™ search engine. Similar to the client devices 102a-n, the server device 150 shown comprises a processor 160 coupled to a computer-readable memory 162. Server device 150, depicted as a single computer system, may be implemented as a network of computer processors. Examples of a server device 150 are servers, mainframe computers, networked computers, a processor-based device, and similar types of systems and devices. The server processor 160 can be any of a number of or combination of computer processors, such as processors from Intel Corporation of Santa Clara, Calif. and Motorola Corporation of Schaumburg, Ill.
Memory 162 contains the search engine application program, also known as a search engine 170. The search engine 170 locates relevant information in response to a search query from a client device 102a. The search engine 122 then provides the result set to the client device 102a via the network 106. The result set comprises one or more article identifiers. An article identifier may be, for example, a URL, a file name, a link, an icon, a path for a local file, or anything else that identifies an article. In the embodiment shown, an article identifier comprises a URL associated with an article. The result set may comprise text, audio, video or any other type of content.
In the embodiment shown, the server device 150, or related device, has previously performed a crawl of the network 106 to locate articles, such as web pages, stored at other devices or systems connected to the network 106, and indexed the articles in memory 162 or on another data storage device. In other embodiments, a crawl is not performed. For example, in one embodiment, an index of articles is created manually.
It should be noted that embodiments of the present invention may comprise systems having different architecture than that which is shown in
Various methods may be implemented in the environment shown in
In one embodiment of the present invention, a computer program identifies an article having an attribute, determines a category associated with the article based at least in part on the article attribute, and stores in a data store a data record comprising a category-article pair identifier associated with the category and the article. For example, a set of base categories may be stored on a client device. The base categories are based on registered schemas (e.g., a schema may exist for Email, Documents, Media, etc., which correspond to Email, Document, and Media categories) and on schema fields (e.g., for a Document Schema, ad “document type” field is stored that has a value of DOC, PDF, MPEG, etc.). A search query can be received and executed on a data store comprising the association data record. In response, the association data record can be received from the data store. The category-article pair identifier may comprise various attributes of an article, including, for example, an article identifier, name, file type, size, “author, and other attributes.
The data store may comprise disk, memory, or any other type of suitable storage. The attribute that the categorization is based on may be any type of suitable attribute, comprising, for example, a file type, an event schema, an event schema field, a location, a name, or other suitable attribute or any combination of suitable attributes.
In one embodiment, the capture processor 124, through the individual capture components, can monitor activity on the client device and can capture events by a generalized event definition mechanism, such as an event schema. Each capture component can define its own event schema or can use a predefined one. Event schema can differ depending on the client application or activity the capture component is monitoring. Generally, the event schema can describe the format for an event, such as, for example, by providing fields for event data associated with the event (such as the time of the event) and fields related to any associated article (such as the title) as well as the content of any associated article (such as the document body). An event schema can describe the format for any suitable event data that relates to an event. For example, an event schema for an instant messenger message event sent by the user 112a can include a recipient or list of recipients, the time sent, the date sent, content of the message, and a conversation ID. An event schema for a web page currently being viewed by a user can include the Uniform Resource Locator or URL of the web page, the time being viewed, and the content of the web page. An event schema for a word processing document being saved by a user can include the title of the document, the time saved, the location of the document, the format of the document, the text of the document, and a pointer to the location of the document. More generally, an event schema can describe the state of the system around the time of the event and also contain information describing other articles. For example, an event schema can contain a URL for a web page event associated with a previous web page that the user navigated from. In addition, event schema can describe fields with more complicated structure like lists. For example, an event schema can also contain lists of information. An email schema can contain fields that list such as, for example, multiple recipients from an email. An event schema can also contain optional fields so that an application can include additional event data if desired.
The article may be associated with none, one, or more than one category or action. The categories with which an article is associated with may be based on one or more attributes. For example, in one embodiment, a computer program attempts to associate an article with any categories that are relevant to one particular article attribute. In another embodiment, the computer program attempts to associate the article with multiple categories that are relevant to more than one attribute associated with the article. In yet another embodiment, the computer program attempts to associate the article with a category that is associated with an action, such as printing or emailing the article.
Similarly, a category may be associated with none, one, or more than one article. For example, in one embodiment of the present invention, a list of categories is created prior to assigning articles to the categories. In such an embodiment, a category may not be initially or ever associated with an article or may be associated with one or more articles.
In one embodiment of the present invention, an input signal is received. The input signal may comprise an event, and the event may comprise an article or part of an article or an identifier of an article. For example, in one such embodiment, a user executes an explicit query and then views an article that was provided as a result in a result set. The article comprises information about cars. When the user clicks on the link associated with the article, an event is generated and sent as a signal to an indexer or other computer program. The event comprises an identifier of the article and may comprise a snippet. The indexer uses the snippet to categorize the article associated with the article identifier. In this example, the article is associated with the category “Car.”
In one embodiment, categories may be associated with both articles and other categories. In such an embodiment, a search may be performed among interrelationships of categories. The category/category relationships may suggest nested or hierarchical relationships among the categories or may just signal some other reason that the categories are related to one another.
For example, in one such embodiment of the present invention, the categories “Food” and “Mexican” are related based on a user's previous activity. The two categories may be related hierarchically—Mexican may be a type of Food. Conversely, Food may be a sub-category for a general category labeled “Mexican.” The relationship may be captured in some way in the association data record. For example, the record may comprise a field to denote the hierarchical level of the two categories. In another embodiment, the two terms are related with no hierarchical relationship.
In one embodiment of the present invention, an article is associated with a category that is associated with an action. The action may comprise, for example, printing, faxing, emailing, copying, or some other suitable action. The category associated with the action may be, for example, “Printed,” “Faxed,” “Email-Sent,” or “Copied.” For example, the user creates a presentation and prints it. In response, one embodiment of the present invention creates two categories, “Presentation” and “Printed.” Two corresponding association data records are also created linking the article with the categories.
After one or more association data records have been stored, a search engine or other application is able to perform searches based on categories. In one embodiment, the search engine receives a search query, causes the search query to be executed on the data store that comprises the association data records, and receives results from the data store that comprise an association between one or more categories and one or more article identifiers. In another embodiment, the search engine receives results that comprise associations between one or more categories and one or more other categories and performs a further search or further searches to locate article identifiers associated with the categories.
The search engine may generate a result set and may cause the article identifiers to be output. In one embodiment, the search engine generates an output signal that comprises the article identifier. For example, the search engine may generate an HTML page that comprises the article identifier, e.g., a short snippet, and a hyperlink to view the complete article. The output signal may comprise a plurality of article identifiers, and the identifiers may be sorted based at least in part on the categories.
The search engine or other application may also comprise the category in the output signal. In one such embodiment, the search engine generates an HTML page that comprises multiple article identifiers that are separated visually by category headers.
In another embodiment, a computer program receives a search query that comprises a category and at least one keyword. The search engine identifies the keyword and searches a data store for data associated with the keyword. For example, if a user enters the search query “Atlanta Mexican,” the search engine identifies “Mexican” as a category and searches for association data records in which the article identifier is related to “Atlanta.” In another embodiment, the search engine attempts to identify multiple categories in the search query. For example, if the user enters the search query “Atlanta Mexican Food,” the search engine may identify “Mexican” and “Food” as categories and attempt to find association data records for these two categories. Once the records are found, the search engine may attempt to find articles related to one or both of the categories.
For example, in one embodiment, an article is categorized by file type. The indexer 130 evaluates the file extension attribute of the article identified to determine the file type. For instance, the indexer 130 receives an article with a file type attribute equal to “.pdf.” The indexer 130 searches a category-file type index, such as a table in a data store to determine one or more categories associated with the file type value. In the category-file type index, the “.pdf” extension may be categorized as a “PDF” or “Acrobat” article; a “.ppt” extension may be categorized as a “PowerPoint” and/or “Presentation” article.
In another embodiment, the name of a file is used to categorize the file. For example, a file that includes “2004 Budget” in the file name is categorized in both a “2004” category and a “Budget” category. In yet another embodiment, keywords are extracted from the content of an article. The indexer 130 then searches a category-keyword data store for one or more categories associated with the keyword. The article is then categorized based on the results of the search. For instance, the most relevant keywords may be used to construct a set of categories the document belongs to.
The search engine 122 may subsequently utilize the category to perform searches. The category may identify, for example, the article as having been created by an application, or the category may identify a subject matter of the article. The category may associate a person's name or the name of a place or organization with a particular article.
The indexer 130 may be unable to find a category with which to associated the article. For instance, the indexer 130 may not find a category match for the file type, name, keyword, or other attributes of the article. If the indexer 130 determines that no existing categories exist that can be associated with the article 208, the indexer 130 creates a new category and stores the category in a data store, such as a category data store, and an association with the article in a category-article data store.
In another embodiment, the indexer 130, after finding categories associated with the article and storing the category-article pair identifier for each category, attempts to infer whether or not a new category or set of categories need be created for the article.
The categories may be created in a number of ways. For example, in one embodiment, a user manually enters one or more categories. In another embodiment, the indexer 130 infers categories based on a user's past search patterns. For example, if a user uses a keyword frequently when performing searches, the indexer 130 may create a category for the keyword. If keywords are often submitted together, the indexer may infer relationships between the categories. In another embodiment, categories may be inferred from user behavior; for example, folders and directories on one or more computing devices mused by the user, categories created in various applications (e.g., folders of “Favorites” in a browser program, such as Microsoft Internet Explorer or email folders or labels in an email program, such as Microsoft Outlook), etc. may be identified and used to create categories. For example, if a user has created a folder or directory named “Taxes,” then a category “Taxes” may be created, and articles stored in or otherwise associated with this folder may be tied to this category. Similarly, web documents indicated in a Favorites folder may be tied to a category name derived from the label of such folders.
For instance, a user enters a search query including the term “presentation.” The query system 132 returns a result set including an article having a file type attribute value equal to “ppt.” If the indexer 130 has not encountered an article having a ppt file type attribute, the indexer 130 can create a new category. The indexer 130 can infer the category based on the keyword in the search query, “presentation.” Articles having a “ppt” file type may also be returned in response to a query comprising the term “PowerPoint.” In such cases, the indexer 130 may create another category, “PowerPoint,” and infer a relationship between the two categories, “presentation” and “PowerPoint.”
Once the indexer 130 locates the appropriate category, or creates a new one, the indexer 130 creates an association data record 212. The association data record identifies both the category and the article and may comprise additional information as well. In one embodiment, the association data record comprises a category identifier and the uniform resource identifier (URI) for each category/article pair. The indexer 130 stores the association data record for later search and retrieval 214. In one embodiment, the association data record is stored in the data store 140.
One or more categories may be associated with any one article. And one or more articles may be associated with any one category. For instance, the user may interact with many PowerPoint documents. Each of the PowerPoint documents may be related to an additional category relating to content within the PowerPoint document. For instance, one PowerPoint may concern budgeting while another concerns targeted marketing. In such a scenario, each PowerPoint document would be associated with the “PowerPoint” category and a second topical category.
In one embodiment, for newly created categories, the indexer 140 inspects articles from categories related to the new category (e.g., parent category) and adds the qualifying articles to the newly created category.
The categories may also be associated with one or more other categories. For instance, in one embodiment, the categories are related in a hierarchical or nested structure such that broader categories are related to somewhat narrower categories, which are, in turn, related to narrower categories. In another embodiment, no nesting or hierarchical relationship between categories is implied; each category is directly associated with other categories. The category associations provide the search engine 122 with a method of retrieving articles of interest to a user.
In the example described above in relation to
After one or more categories have been created and articles associated with those categories, the categories can be used to perform searches.
The query system 132 attempts to identify categories associated with the keywords 404. For instance, the query system 132 may receive a search query comprising the keywords “presentation 2003 budget.” The query system searches a data store comprising categories for each of these three terms and may search a data store comprising category-keyword associations as well 406. The query system 132 identifies the term “presentation” as associated with the “PowerPoint” category. The query system 132 further identifies the keyword “budget” as associated with the “Budgeting” category. For example, the query system 132 may search a data store comprising category-keyword associations. Each query by keyword may return zero, one, or many categories.
The query system 132 then searches for articles associated with the category or categories 408. For instance, in the example above, the query system 132 performs a query of the data store for association data records having “PowerPoint” or “Budgeting” as the Category. The query system may then perform a union or intersection of the data sets to create a set of category/article association data records with which to work. In one embodiment, each association data record comprises an article identifier, such as a URI. In another embodiment, the association data record comprises a pointer to data store containing article identifiers. In a further embodiment, the association data record comprises both article and category identifiers associated with each category retrieved in response to the search query. In such an embodiment, the query system 132 performs additional queries for each set of category/category relationships until they are resolved into category/article relationships.
For example, in one embodiment, the term “Presentation” is a category. Associated with the category “Presentation” is the category “PowerPoint.” A search query that the query system 132 determines is associated with “Presentation” may also be associated with “PowerPoint.” Accordingly, articles associated with both the “PowerPoint” and “Presentation” categories would be returned or at least considered in response to the search query.
In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown, the user enters text in the text entry section 506 of the application that comprises the terms “test” and “preparation.” In response to the user completing the sentence, i.e., entering a period, the application shown generates an implicit query that comprises all of the terms from the first sentence, comprising the terms “test” and “preparation.” In response, the query system 132 identifies a category called “Test Preparation.” Associated with the category are various articles identifiers.
The user then emails the article as an attachment to another user. When the user emails the article, an event is generated. The event is captured, and a new category is created—“Email-Sent.” In response to the user emailing the article, e.g., pressing the send key, the application generates an implicit query. In response, the query system 132 identifies the category “Email-Sent” as well as the category “Test Preparation.” Associated with both of these categories are various article identifiers.
The query system 132 uses the article identifiers to find and/or generate brief snippets about the articles and displays those snippets in the search results section 504 of the application interface 502. In the embodiment shown, the results comprise previously retrieved search results, images, news, and information from the user's computer. In other embodiments both subsets of this information and/or additional information may be shown depending on the user's preferences and other criteria.
The foregoing description of embodiments of the invention has been presented only for the purpose of illustration and description and is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Numerous modifications and adaptations thereof will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
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