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A study of results overlap and uniqueness among major Web search engines
Authors:Amanda Spink  Bernard J Jansen  Chris Blakely  Sherry Koshman
Institution:1. Faculty of Information Technology, Queensland University of Technology, Gardens Point Campus, 2 George St., GPO Box 2434, Brisbane QLD 4001, Australia;2. School of Information Sciences and Technology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA;3. Market Strategy Manager Infospace, Inc.—Search and Directory, 601 108th Avenue NE, Ste 1200, Bellevue, WA 98004, USA;4. School of Information Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, 611 IS Building, 135 N. Bellefield Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA
Abstract:The performance and capabilities of Web search engines is an important and significant area of research. Millions of people world wide use Web search engines very day. This paper reports the results of a major study examining the overlap among results retrieved by multiple Web search engines for a large set of more than 10,000 queries. Previous smaller studies have discussed a lack of overlap in results returned by Web search engines for the same queries. The goal of the current study was to conduct a large-scale study to measure the overlap of search results on the first result page (both non-sponsored and sponsored) across the four most popular Web search engines, at specific points in time using a large number of queries. The Web search engines included in the study were MSN Search, Google, Yahoo! and Ask Jeeves. Our study then compares these results with the first page results retrieved for the same queries by the metasearch engine Dogpile.com. Two sets of randomly selected user-entered queries, one set was 10,316 queries and the other 12,570 queries, from Infospace’s Dogpile.com search engine (the first set was from Dogpile, the second was from across the Infospace Network of search properties were submitted to the four single Web search engines). Findings show that the percent of total results unique to only one of the four Web search engines was 84.9%, shared by two of the three Web search engines was 11.4%, shared by three of the Web search engines was 2.6%, and shared by all four Web search engines was 1.1%. This small degree of overlap shows the significant difference in the way major Web search engines retrieve and rank results in response to given queries. Results point to the value of metasearch engines in Web retrieval to overcome the biases of individual search engines.
Keywords:Web search engine  Overlap  Google  Yahoo  MSN Search  Ask Jeeves  Dogpile  Infospace Inc
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