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Using clicks as implicit judgements: Expectations versus observations

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-30, 22:08 authored by Falk ScholerFalk Scholer, Milad Shokouhi, Bodo Billerbeck, Andrew Turpin
Clickthrough data has been the subject of increasing popularity as an implicit indicator of user feedback. Previous analysis has suggested that user click behaviour is subject to a quality bias¿that is, users click at different rank positions when viewing effective search results than when viewing less effective search results. Based on this observation, it should be possible to use click data to infer the quality of the underlying search system. In this paper we carry out a user study to systematically investigate how click behaviour changes for different levels of search system effectiveness as measured by information retrieval performance metrics. Our results show that click behaviour does not vary systematically with the quality of search results. However, click behaviour does vary significantly between individual users, and between search topics. This suggests that using direct click behaviour¿click rank and click frequency¿to infer the quality of the underlying search system is problematic. Further analysis of our user click data indicates that the correspondence between clicks in a search result list and subsequent confirmation that the clicked resource is actually relevant is low. Using clicks as an implicit indication of relevance should therefore be done with caution.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1007/978-3-540-78646-7_6
  2. 2.
    ISBN - Is published in 9783540786450 (urn:isbn:9783540786450)

Start page

28

End page

39

Total pages

12

Outlet

Advances in Information Retrieval

Editors

C. Macdonald, I. Ounis, V. Plachouras, I. Ruthven, R.W. White

Name of conference

30th European Conference on IR Research ECIR 2008

Publisher

Springer

Place published

Berlin, Germany

Start date

2008-03-30

End date

2008-04-03

Language

English

Copyright

© 2008 Springer Verlag

Former Identifier

2006009271

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-10-09

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