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Table 1: Example Search Session

in Abstract Evaluating Implicit Measures to Improve Web Search
by Steve Fox, Kuldeep Karnawat, Mark Mydl, Susan Dumais, Thomas White
"... In PAGE 7: ... For the purpose of analysis, I was satisfied with the search was coded as satisfied with the search session (SAT), I was partially satisfied with the search was coded as partially satisfied with the search session (PSAT), and I was not satisfied with the search was coded as dissatisfied with the search session (DSAT). Table1 illustrates an example search session, showing sample User Actions (e.g.... ..."

Table 7: Files generated for each search session.

in Corpus Access for Beginners: the W3Corpora Project
by Doug Arnold Department, Doug Arnold, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester Essex
"... In PAGE 27: ...Table 7: Files generated for each search session. Confirming these choices causes the files listed in Table7 to be generated (the base file name 325073 uniquely identifies the session: it is arbitrary, generated when a user accesses the initial search page, or requests a new search). These files define the environment for the current search, and for any subsequent search history (In the file listings below, comments follow the # , and are added here for readability.... ..."

Table 9. Assessment of search success in search sessions (scale 1=poor, 4=excellent)

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 2. Time to finish each search session (in second) Type I topic Type II topic

in TREC10 Web and Interactive Tracks at CSIRO
by Nick Craswell David, David Hawking, Ross Wilkinson, Mingfang Wu 2002
"... In PAGE 6: ....9 4.7 4.0 4.3 4.5 Table2 shows the time taken to finish each search session. Overall, subjects from Group3 used the least time by using the ranked list interface, this is probably because subjects of this interface got less distraction, they concentrated on one interface, and the quality of this list is very high.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 1 shows some statistical information about the first 1000 search sessions made in the system.

in Cross-language information access through phrase browsing
by Anselmo Peñas, Julio Gonzalo, Felisa Verdejo, Dpto Lenguajes, Sistemas Informáticos 2001
"... In PAGE 8: ... Table1 . Statistics of the first 1000 sessions over WTB The results indicate that phrasal information is helpful in the searching process.... ..."
Cited by 7

Table 1 shows some statistical information about the first 1000 search sessions made in the system.

in Cross-Language Information Access through Phrase Browsing
by Anselmo Peñas , Julio Gonzalo, Felisa Verdejo 2001
"... In PAGE 8: ... Table1 . Statistics of the first 1000 sessions over WTB The results indicate that phrasal information is helpful in the searching process.... ..."
Cited by 7

Table 4: Analysis of search sessions for passage and XML element systems. Total Passage Element

in Search and Navigation in Structured Document Retrieval: Comparison of User Behaviour in Search on Document Passages and XML Elements
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 3: ... The maximum session duration was hence 15 minutes, the time limit allocated to a task. Table4 summarises our findings. From the total of 301 sessions, 173 were search tasks conducted on the passage system and 128 on the element retrieval sys- tem.... ..."

Table 4: Session Evaluation of Search Strings

in ABSTRACT Searchstrings revealing User Intent A Better Understanding of User Perception
by Carsten Stolz, Katholische Universität Eichstätt-ingolstadt, Maximilian Viermetz

Table 2. Most frequent queries that precede and follow the queries walmart and target in user search sessions, and the corresponding precede and follow frequencies.

in General Terms
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 3: ... As we show further, a very important quantitative component of the temporal correlation between queries such as united airlines and american airlines or walmart and target (one of the positive examples for temporal correlation used in previous work [5]) comes as a consequence of the fact that many users are querying both queries in the same search session.3 For example, Table2 shows the most frequent queries that precede and follow the queries walmart and target in user sessions, as observed over a period of several weeks in the MSN Search query logs.4 Our experiments show that many of the semantically related queries hypothesized by using temporal correlation as semantically related to a target query are in fact queries that are among the top 10 most frequent queries that follow immediately the target query in user sessions (as shown in the Appendix).... ..."

Table 3.3 Key ICOLC Statistics Included in the Vendor Reports (by vendor) VENDORS Items requested Searches Sessions Turnaways

in unknown title
by unknown authors 1981
Cited by 1
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