Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJoella Nash Modified over 9 years ago
1
SLOW SEARCH Jaime Teevan, Kevyn Collins-Thompson, Ryen White, Susan Dumais and Yubin Kim
2
Slow Movements
3
Speed Focus in Search Reasonable
4
Not All Searches Need to Be Fast Long-term tasks Long search sessions Multi-session searches Social search Question asking Technologically limited Limited connectivity Mobile devices Search from space
5
Making Use of Additional Time
6
TIME + SEARCH Understand how time influences the search experience
7
Time in Search: Micro Scale Impact of sub-second changes in response time Study using large-scale query log analysis Natural variation exists within a single query Measure interaction as f(response time) Time to click Abandonment rate
8
Small Increases Big Changes
9
Impact of Sub-Second Changes Imperceptible changes impact behavior Impact of slower page load time Slower time to click Increased abandonment Some queries more sensitive to time than others Time impacts navigational queries > informational Informational queries less impacted by very slow results
10
Time in Search: Macro Scale Impact of longer changes in response time Two user surveys with 1476 participants in total Detailed survey with 141 MSFT employees Online survey with 1335 people Asked about the participant’s last search Willingness to wait for results as f(response time)
11
Last Search Took Minutes or Hours
12
Time Constraints in Search Reported spending more time on some searches Important tasks Tasks with a deadline Tasks with bad search results Time constraints 34% of tasks needed results urgently 39% of tasks needed results by a deadline 27% of tasks needed results whenever
13
Willingness to Wait Time willing to wait < actual time spent searching Participants do not trust the search engine 28% people said they want “fast results always” For important tasks Spent more time searching than less important Willing to wait less than less important
14
Willing to Wait for Quality Results
15
Impact of Longer Intervals of Time People do not want to wait, but… Report spending a lot of time on important tasks 90% of the important tasks took more than 1 minute 23% of respondents found their results unacceptable Are willing wait in some cases When the results obtained were poor When a perfect answer is sought
16
Summary
17
QUESTIONS? Jaime Teevan teevan@microsoft.com Yubin Kim yubink@cmu.edu
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.