Title of article
Associating Search and Navigation Behavior Through Log Analysis
Author/Authors
Mazlita Mat-Hassan and Mark Levene، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
22
From page
913
To page
934
Abstract
We report on a study that was undertaken to better
understand search and navigation behavior by exploiting
the close association between the process underlying
users’ query submission and the navigational trails
emanating from query clickthroughs. To our knowledge,
there has been little research towards bridging the gap
between these two important processes pertaining to
users’ online information searching activity. Based on
log data obtained from a search and navigation documentation
system called AutoDoc, we propose a model
of user search sessions and provide analysis on users’
link or clickthrough selection behavior, reformulation
activities, and search strategy patterns. We also conducted
a simple user study to gauge users’ perceptions
of their information seeking activity when interacting
with the system. The results obtained show that analyzing
both the query submissions and navigation starting
from query clickthrough, reveals much more interesting
patterns than analyzing these two processes independently.
On average, AutoDoc users submitted only one
query per search session and entered approximately
two query terms. Specifically, our results show how
AutoDoc users are more inclined to submit new queries
or resubmit modified queries than to navigate by linkfollowing.
We also show that users’ behavior within this
search system can be approximated by Zipf’s Law
distribution.
Journal title
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Record number
843964
Link To Document