What stops a few popular Web sites from dominating the global exchange
of ideas on the internet? Human curiosity powered by search engines,
researchers say.



Visitors view and link to a few Web sites such as Yahoo, eBay and
MySpace often, whereas most sites are hardly noticed. Some experts worry
that search engines such as Google exaggerate this trend, because they
rank search results partly by how popular a Web site already is. As a
result, big sites could get ever more popular and small sites could grow
relatively more obscure-an increasingly undemocratic result that critics
deride as a "Googlearchy."

But Filippo Menczer <http://www.informatics.indiana.edu/fil>  , Who
teaches cognitive and computer science at Indiana University
<http://www.indiana.edu>  , found that this is not the way it works in
the real world. His team studied databases of search terms and Web page
traffic and then created a mathematical model to explain the observed
patterns. It turns out that even though search engines reward pages for
being popular, they also boost traffic to remote sites.

Menczer's model suggests that this effect occurs because people use
search engines when they are looking for very specific information. So a
small site that closely matches their individual interests will beat out
a much more popular site that does not.

"That's piece of behavioral data that the previous model did not
consider. If you do not consider it, you assume everybody thinks the
same way, everybody's interested in the same things. But that's
not the case," Menczer says.

For example, if you search Google for "windows," he first hit
will be Microsoft Corporation, maker of the windows operating system and
one of the word's most popular Web site. But if you search for
"double-hung windows," you will come up with the little-know Web
site for Iowa-based Pella Corporation, which makes actual windows.

Menczer's model suggest that search engines introduce people to 20
percent more Web sites than they would find if they were forced simply
to surf from site to site-as Web users did in the old days, before
search engines.


Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.blogspot.com>
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>



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