Abstract:
In recent years, the amount of available documents in the electronic medium such as electronic books, digital libraries and email messages increased rapidly. Therefore, the task of organizing and manipulating these resources has gained more importance and has become more difficult. Automatic text categorization is widely used for organizing and manipulating these documents in the electronic medium. However, since the data in text categorization is very high-dimensional, feature selection is crucial to make the task more efficient and precise. In this study, we make an extensive evaluation of the feature selection metrics used in text categorization by using local and global policies. For the experiments, we use seven datasets which vary in size, complexity and skewness. We use SVM as the classifier and tfidf weighting for term weighting. We observed that almost in all metrics and datasets, the local policy outperforms others when the number of keywords is low and global policy outperforms others as the number of keywords increases. In addition to the evaluation of the existing feature selection metrics, we propose new metrics which have shown high success rates especially with low number of keywords. Moreover, we propose a keyword selection framework called Adaptive Keyword Selection (AKS). It is based on selecting different number of keywords for different classes and it improved the performance significantly in skew datasets.