An Investigation of Biases in Web Search Engine Query Suggestions

December 02, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Online information review (Print)

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Authors Malte Bonart, Anastasiia Samokhina, Gernot Heisenberg, Philipp Schaer arXiv ID 1912.00651 Category cs.IR: Information Retrieval Cross-listed cs.CY Citations 22 Venue Online information review (Print) Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Survey-based studies suggest that search engines are trusted more than social media or even traditional news, although cases of false information or defamation are known. In this study, we analyze query suggestion features of three search engines to see if these features introduce some bias into the query and search process that might compromise this trust. We test our approach on person-related search suggestions by querying the names of politicians from the German Bundestag before the German federal election of 2017. This study introduces a framework to systematically examine and automatically analyze the varieties in different query suggestions for person names offered by major search engines. To test our framework, we collected data from the Google, Bing, and DuckDuckGo query suggestion APIs over a period of four months for 629 different names of German politicians. The suggestions were clustered and statistically analyzed with regards to different biases, like gender, party, or age and with regards to the stability of the suggestions over time.
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