Authors
Leif Azzopardi, Diane Kelly, Kathy Brennan
Publication date
2013/7/28
Book
Proceedings of the 36th international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
Pages
23-32
Description
affects how users interact with a search system. Microeconomic theory is used to generate the cost-interaction hypothesis that states as the cost of querying increases, users will pose fewer queries and examine more documents per query. A between-subjects laboratory study with 36 undergraduate subjects was conducted, where subjects were randomly assigned to use one of three search interfaces that varied according to the amount of physical cost required to query: Structured (high cost), Standard (medium cost) and Query Suggestion (low cost). Results show that subjects who used the Structured interface submitted significantly fewer queries, spent more time on search results pages, examined significantly more documents per query, and went to greater depths in the search results list. Results also showed that these subjects spent longer generating their initial queries, saved more relevant documents and …
Total citations
2013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320243131317251319921142811
Scholar articles
L Azzopardi, D Kelly, K Brennan - Proceedings of the 36th international ACM SIGIR …, 2013
D Kelly, L Azzopardi - Proceedings of the 38th international ACM SIGIR …, 2015