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Variations in Relevance Judgments and the Shelf Life of Test Collections The fundamental property of Cranfield-style evaluations, that system rankings are stable even when assessors disagree on individual relevance decisions, was validated on traditional test collections. ...

This work was devised at the ECIR collab-a-thon last year, and we hope to continue discussions at this year's collab-a-thon in Lucca! Read more here: arxiv.org/abs/2502.20937 #ECIR2025 #SIGIR2025

1 year ago 5 0 0 0
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We consider that a human represents a bound on performance under a subjective task such as determining relevance, as only a single intent is defined in each topic. We find that systems are either indistinguishable from humans or exceed humans as oracle rankers.

1 year ago 2 0 1 0
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We then look downstream, what effect does re-annotation have on modern systems? We find that modern system comparisons are increasingly unstable on DL’19, meaning that determining the pair-wise ordering of systems when measured nDCG values are far apart remains unstable.

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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We look into causes of disagreement, finding that subtle differences in query intent, even when relevance is well defined, can lead to greater disagreement in 4-grade relevance. However, we find that it is challenging to agree on what is relevant even under a fixed narrative.

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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Re-annotation is commonly performed to validate how variations in relevance judgements affect our ability to discriminate between retrieval systems. We validate hypotheses on stability, but in a modern setting, there are no narratives, 4-grade relevance, and a neural pool.

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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🚨 New Pre-Print! 🚨 Reviewer 2 has once again asked for DL’19, what can you say in rebuttal?  To help, we have re-annotated DL’19. Work done with @maik_froebe.bsky.social, @hscells.bsky.social, @fschlatt1.bsky.social, Guglielmo Faggioli, Saber Zerhoudi, @macavaney.bsky.social, Eugene Yang 🧵

1 year ago 6 3 1 0