Topic-Oriented Collaborative Web Crawling
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Date
2001
Authors
Chung, Chiasen
Advisor
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
University of Waterloo
Abstract
A <i>web crawler</i> is a program that "walks" the Web to gather web resources. In order to scale to the ever-increasing Web, multiple crawling agents may be deployed in a distributed fashion to retrieve web data co-operatively. A common approach is to divide the Web into many partitions with an agent assigned to crawl within each one. If an agent obtains a web resource that is not from its partition, the resource will be transferred to the rightful owner. This thesis proposes a novel approach to distributed web data gathering by partitioning the Web into topics. The proposed approach employs multiple focused crawlers to retrieve pages from various topics. When a crawler retrieves a page of another topic, it transfers the page to the appropriate crawler. This approach is known as <i>topic-oriented collaborative web crawling</i>. An implementation of the system was built and experimentally evaluated. In order to identify the topic of a web page, a topic classifier was incorporated into the crawling system. As the classifier categorizes only English pages, a language identifier was also introduced to distinguish English pages from non-English ones. From the experimental results, we found that redundance retrieval was low and that a resource, retrieved by an agent, is six times more likely to be retained than a system that uses conventional hashing approach. These numbers were viewed as strong indications that <i>topic-oriented collaborative web crawling system</i> is a viable approach to web data gathering.
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Keywords
Computer Science, Web Crawling, Distributed System, Text Categorization