Guillaume Pitel

IR
3papers
52citations
Novelty50%
AI Score24

3 Papers

LGNov 9, 2021
Look back, look around: a systematic analysis of effective predictors for new outlinks in focused Web crawling

Thi Kim Nhung Dang, Doina Bucur, Berk Atil et al.

Small and medium enterprises rely on detailed Web analytics to be informed about their market and competition. Focused crawlers meet this demand by crawling and indexing specific parts of the Web. Critically, a focused crawler must quickly find new pages that have not yet been indexed. Since a new page can be discovered only by following a new outlink, predicting new outlinks is very relevant in practice. In the literature, many feature designs have been proposed for predicting changes in the Web. In this work we provide a structured analysis of this problem, using new outlinks as our running prediction target. Specifically, we unify earlier feature designs in a taxonomic arrangement of features along two dimensions: static versus dynamic features, and features of a page versus features of the network around it. Within this taxonomy, complemented by our new (mainly, dynamic network) features, we identify best predictors for new outlinks. Our main conclusion is that most informative features are the recent history of new outlinks on a page itself, and of its content-related pages. Hence, we propose a new 'look back, look around' (LBLA) model, that uses only these features. With the obtained predictions, we design a number of scoring functions to guide a focused crawler to pages with most new outlinks, and compare their performance. The LBLA approach proved extremely effective, outperforming other models including those that use a most complete set of features. One of the learners we use, is the recent NGBoost method that assumes a Poisson distribution for the number of new outlinks on a page, and learns its parameters. This connects the two so far unrelated avenues in the literature: predictions based on features of a page, and those based on probabilistic modelling. All experiments were carried out on an original dataset, made available by a commercial focused crawler.

IRApr 19, 2016
Count-Min Tree Sketch: Approximate counting for NLP

Guillaume Pitel, Geoffroy Fouquier, Emmanuel Marchand et al.

The Count-Min Sketch is a widely adopted structure for approximate event counting in large scale processing. In a previous work we improved the original version of the Count-Min-Sketch (CMS) with conservative update using approximate counters instead of linear counters. These structures are computationaly efficient and improve the average relative error (ARE) of a CMS at constant memory footprint. These improvements are well suited for NLP tasks, in which one is interested by the low-frequency items. However, if Log counters allow to improve ARE, they produce a residual error due to the approximation. In this paper, we propose the Count-Min Tree Sketch (Copyright 2016 eXenSa. All rights reserved) variant with pyramidal counters, which are focused toward taking advantage of the Zipfian distribution of text data.

IRFeb 17, 2015
Count-Min-Log sketch: Approximately counting with approximate counters

Guillaume Pitel, Geoffroy Fouquier

Count-Min Sketch is a widely adopted algorithm for approximate event counting in large scale processing. However, the original version of the Count-Min-Sketch (CMS) suffers of some deficiences, especially if one is interested by the low-frequency items, such as in text-mining related tasks. Several variants of CMS have been proposed to compensate for the high relative error for low-frequency events, but the proposed solutions tend to correct the errors instead of preventing them. In this paper, we propose the Count-Min-Log sketch, which uses logarithm-based, approximate counters instead of linear counters to improve the average relative error of CMS at constant memory footprint.