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An eye tracking study of the effect of target rank on web search
2007
Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems - CHI '07
Web search engines present search results in a rank ordered list. This works when what a user wants is near the top, but sometimes the information that the user really wants is located at the bottom of the page. This study examined how users' search behaviors vary when target results were displayed at various positions for informational and navigational tasks. We found that when targets were placed relatively low in the first page of search results, people spent more time searching and were
doi:10.1145/1240624.1240691
dblp:conf/chi/GuanC07
fatcat:7k67h2og4jgp5f7wx4sfmjswxu