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- Ranking ‘by Relevance’ in Academic Literature Searches: Prevalence . . .
All these factors can lead to incomplete or biased results when academics search for literature in a certain field if a ranking reproduces existing biases in scholarly publishing — and combining such factors in determining search ranking may exacerbate this
- How to Get Better, Less Biased Search Results | TIME
If your previous queries have suggested an attitude, pro or con, search results may be biased to give you more of the same rather than to find the most scientifically rigorous conclusions
- Trustworthiness Evaluations of Search Results: The Impact of Rank and . . .
One frequently-raised concern is that users interpret search results’ rank as an indicator of the information’s credibility and trustworthiness [10, 34] Rank has been shown to correlate strongly with the probability of being clicked, for searches in general [16, 20, 39] and health-related queries in particular [12, 29, 39, 43]
- Search neutrality - Wikipedia
Search neutrality aims to keep the organic search results (results returned because of their relevance to the search terms, as opposed to results sponsored by advertising) of a search engine free from any manipulation, while network neutrality aims to keep those who provide and govern access to the Internet from limiting the availability of reso
- What Would Happen If Search Engines Had to Give Higher Visibility to . . .
The second page was designed to mimic how search results might look if regulators required search engines to combat search engine “bias,” such as exposing searchers to more diverse viewpoints Any guesses how searchers responded to the second page with the lower-ranked results?
- How Does Google Determine Ranking Results - Google Search
Independent studies conducted by Stanford and The Economist have all found no forms of political bias in Search and News results As the Economist concluded: “Google rewards reputable
- Relevance Ranking: How Search. gov Ranks Your Search Results
Relevance Ranking: How Search gov Ranks Your Search Results Google and Bing hold their ranking algorithms closely as trade secrets, as a guard against people trying to game the system to ensure their own content comes out on top, regardless of whether that’s appropriate to the search
- Are People Biased in Their Use of Search Engines?
Here, we assess whether people are biased in their use of a search engine; specifically, whether people tend to click on those items that are presented as being the most relevant in the search engine’s results list (those items listed at the top of the results list)
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