articleJournal of Computer-Mediated CommunicationApr 1, 2007BRONZE OA

In Google We Trust: Users’ Decisions on Rank, Position, and Relevance

Human Computer Interaction (Switzerland) · Cornell University

Indexed incrossrefdoaj

Abstract

An eye tracking experiment revealed that college student users have substantial trust in Google's ability to rank results by their true relevance to the query. When the participants selected a link to follow from Google's result pages, their decisions were strongly biased towards links higher in position even if the abstracts themselves were less relevant. While the participants reacted to artificially reduced retrieval quality by greater scrutiny, they failed to achieve the same success rate. This demonstrated trust in Google has implications for the search engine's tremendous potential influence on culture, society, and user traffic on the Web.

Citation impact

706
total citations
FWCI
59.67
Percentile
100%
References
50
Citations per year

Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Relevance (law)
  • Rank (graph theory)
  • Position (finance)
  • Computer science
  • Internet privacy
  • Information retrieval
  • World Wide Web
  • Psychology
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