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Some Key Science Web Sites May
Be Buried In Information Avalanche
As more and more people are turning to the Internet to find information,
important science websites are in danger of becoming buried in
the sheer avalanche of facts now available online. Key science
sites are failing to register in the top 30 Google search results.
New research funded by the Economic and Social Research Council
(ESRC) clearly shows that anyone using the Web to make their information
available must now pay attention not only to the quality of their
sites but also how easy they are to find.
Dr Ralph Schroeder, Dr Alexandre Caldas, Professor William Dutton,
and Dr. Jenny Fry of the Oxford Internet Institute have investigated
how the Internet is changing the way in which people seek out
sources of scientific expertise.
Traditionally publishers have held a central position because
of the importance of academic articles, but this is changing with
increasing uses of the Internet and Web.
The study focuses on how academic researchers in particular interact
with the Web on topics including HIV/AIDS, climate change, terrorism,
the Internet and society. These subjects are highly topical in
today's society, but the findings of this study will apply much
more widely to the uses of the Internet and Web for searching
for information on a variety of topics.
A fundamental observation was that, despite popular perception,
the Web is far from being a neutral source of information. It
has a particular structure that steers the search in directions
that may not be intended by the user and so makes some sites more
accessible than others. Search engines such as Google play an
increasingly important gate-keeping role that will influence the
information that is found. They can shape "winners and losers"
by means that are not always apparent and moreover do so in a
manner which can vary according to subject matter.
- The "visibility" of information on the Web is of increasing
importance. Do people looking for research results on climate
change or terrorism find themselves directed to a few top sites
rather than a wide array of diverse sources? Do they encounter
the most highly regarded researchers rather than marginal ones?
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Interviews revealed that researchers' ideas of key networks,
structures and organisations may not be mirrored by search
engines. For example the HIV/AIDS researchers reported using
national journals, charity organisations, statistics and public
sector organisations but none of these appear in the top 30
search results for generic domain keywords. In addition, a
number of institutions, people and other key organisations
and resources failed to appear in the top 30 search results.
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The role search engines play can vary according to topic.
In the HIV/AIDS and the Internet and society domains, for
instance, search engines such as Google was mainly used as
an aide memoire for locating known sources. For researchers
on terrorism, the search engine played a more central role
in exploring the object of research and identifying relevant
sites of information.
"This will be an issue not just for policymakers," Dr. Schroeder
says, "but for educators, organisations involved in science and
research communication, regulators responsible for access to the
Web, and citizens who are concerned with the diversity and richness
of the information world around them."
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