We use cookies to improve your experience with our site.
Jun-Cheng Huang, Xiu-Qi Li, Jie Wu. A Semantic Searching Scheme in Heterogeneous Unstructured P2P Networks[J]. Journal of Computer Science and Technology, 2011, 26(6): 925-941. DOI: 10.1007/s11390-011-1190-z
Citation: Jun-Cheng Huang, Xiu-Qi Li, Jie Wu. A Semantic Searching Scheme in Heterogeneous Unstructured P2P Networks[J]. Journal of Computer Science and Technology, 2011, 26(6): 925-941. DOI: 10.1007/s11390-011-1190-z

A Semantic Searching Scheme in Heterogeneous Unstructured P2P Networks

  • Semantic-based searching in peer-to-peer (P2P) networks has drawn significant attention recently. A number of semantic searching schemes, such as GES proposed by Zhu Y et al., employ search models in Information Retrieval (IR). All these IR-based schemes use one vector to summarize semantic contents of all documents on a single node. For example, GES derives a node vector based on the IR model: VSM (Vector Space Model). A topology adaptation algorithm and a search protocol are then designed according to the similarity between node vectors of different nodes. Although the single semantic vector is suitable when the distribution of documents in each node is uniform, it may not be efficient when the distribution is diverse. When there are many categories of documents at each node, the node vector representation may be inaccurate. We extend the idea of GES and present a new class-based semantic searching scheme (CSS) specifically designed for unstructured P2P networks with heterogeneous single-node document collection. It makes use of a state-of-the-art data clustering algorithm, online spherical k-means clustering (OSKM), to cluster all documents on a node into several classes. Each class can be viewed as a virtual node. Virtual nodes are connected through virtual links. As a result, the class vector replaces the node vector and plays an important role in the class-based topology adaptation and search process. This makes CSS very efficient. Our simulation using the IR benchmark TREC collection demonstrates that CSS outperforms GES in terms of higher recall, higher precision, and lower search cost.
  • loading

Catalog

    /

    DownLoad:  Full-Size Img  PowerPoint
    Return
    Return