This report describes the participation of two Danish universities, University of Copenhagen and Aalborg University, in the international search engine competition on COVID-19 (the 2020 TREC-COVID Challenge) organised by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and its Text Retrieval Conference (TREC) division. The aim of the competition was to find the best search engine strategy for retrieving precise biomedical scientific information on COVID-19 from the largest, at that point in time, dataset of curated scientific literature on COVID-19 -- the COVID-19 Open Research Dataset (CORD-19). CORD-19 was the result of a call to action to the tech community by the U.S. White House in March 2020, and was shortly thereafter posted on Kaggle as an AI competition by the Allen Institute for AI, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Georgetown University's Center for Security and Emerging Technology, Microsoft, and the National Library of Medicine at the US National Institutes of Health. CORD-19 contained over 200,000 scholarly articles (of which more than 100,000 were with full text) about COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, and related coronaviruses, gathered from curated biomedical sources. The TREC-COVID challenge asked for the best way to (a) retrieve accurate and precise scientific information, in response to some queries formulated by biomedical experts, and (b) rank this information decreasingly by its relevance to the query. In this document, we describe the TREC-COVID competition setup, our participation to it, and our resulting reflections and lessons learned about the state-of-art technology when faced with the acute task of retrieving precise scientific information from a rapidly growing corpus of literature, in response to highly specialised queries, in the middle of a pandemic.
翻译:本报告介绍了两所丹麦大学(哥本哈根大学和Aalborg大学)参加美国国家标准和技术研究所(NIST)及其文本检索会议司举办的关于COVID-19(2020 TREC-COVID挑战)的国际搜索引擎竞赛的情况,这次竞赛的目的是寻找最佳搜索引擎战略,从当时最大型的哥本哈根大学和Aalborg大学(哥本哈根大学和Aalborg大学)获得关于COVID-19(COVID-19(CORD-19))的精密科学文献数据集。 CORD-19是美国白宫于2020年3月向技术界发出行动呼吁,要求采取行动,作为Allen研究所、Chan Zuckerberg 倡议、Georgon大学安全和新兴技术中心、微软公司和美国国家卫生研究所国家医学图书馆(CORD)收集了20多万份学术文章(其中超过10万份为COVD-开放研究数据集的实用价值)。