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1.3.4: The Online World

  • Page ID
    56709

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    The use of network computer technology is ubiquitous in modern society. Nearly every time we use a computer, device, or phone, we are using network technology. Of course we are using digital computer technology at the same time. Computers are basically data crunching machines, and the web pages, games, and entertainment streams are simply data being processed using very sophisticated algorithms. Within these algorithms are methods that rely on statistical and data science methods.

    A good example of the influence of statistical and data science methods on the internet can be observed by considering web-based search engines. You and a friend could enter the same terms into a search engine, you on your computer and them on their computer. Chances are that the results that you will see on your search will differ from those of your friend. This discrepancy is because most search engines have been trained using your web history and other online behavior to try to tailor your search results to be most useful for you. The complexity and the size of this problem is enormous. A search must somehow consider finding the pages relevant to your search terms—over the entire known internet—and sort the results so that the most important resources are listed first.

    Creating these types of search engines requires methods for assessing the content of web pages and then measuring not only the amount of relevance of the page to the search parameters but also the relevance to the usual requirements of the user based on their search or web histories, as well as the general popularity of the pages based on others search histories. If someone enters the search term “apple,” one can think of two major search results that could result from this search term. The first, of course, is the fruit, while the second is the well-known computer and technology company. Within each of these options the search engine must decide how the relevant pages are ranked and sorted in the output window. All these comparisons are determined using sophisticated statistical and mathematical ideas and algorithms from computer science. Of course, there may be other factors as well. Companies might pay search engines to ensure that their results come up first. This is quite common with many large corporations.


    This page titled 1.3.4: The Online World is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by .

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