2018
DOI: 10.1145/3274417
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Auditing Partisan Audience Bias within Google Search

Abstract: There is a growing consensus that online platforms have a systematic influence on the democratic process. However, research beyond social media is limited. In this paper, we report the results of a mixed-methods algorithm audit of partisan audience bias and personalization within Google Search. Following Donald Trump's inauguration, we recruited 187 participants to complete a survey and install a browser extension that enabled us to collect Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs) from their computers. To quantify … Show more

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Cited by 150 publications
(144 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
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“…To account for differences in search result ranking, we used RBO, a metric designed explicitly for investigating similarities in the output of search engines (Webber et al, 2010;Cardoso & Magalhães, 2011;Robertson et al, 2018). Unlike JI, RBO weights top search results more than lower ones to take into account that a source's ranking influences the probability of the user seeing it (Cutrell & Guan, 2007).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To account for differences in search result ranking, we used RBO, a metric designed explicitly for investigating similarities in the output of search engines (Webber et al, 2010;Cardoso & Magalhães, 2011;Robertson et al, 2018). Unlike JI, RBO weights top search results more than lower ones to take into account that a source's ranking influences the probability of the user seeing it (Cutrell & Guan, 2007).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These studies expose a range of methodological challenges in search engine audits that we consider, including the choice of search terms, language settings, geolocation, search history, and logged-in status [53]. While some recent studies have emphasized ecological validity by leveraging plugins which scrape search results from real users' results [17,54,55,56], here we opt for the control, consistency, and scale afforded by automated means of scraping results.…”
Section: Search Engine Auditsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… Robertson et al report that their scores have high correlation with the other scoring systems mentioned here[61].…”
mentioning
confidence: 68%
“…In our dataset, we observe many overtly political websites running experiments using Optimizely. To quantify this, we adopt a mapping of websites to partisan bias scores developed by Robertson et al [61]. These scores are calculated based on the relative frequency that a given website is shared on Twitter by registered Democrats and Republicans.…”
Section: Political Contentmentioning
confidence: 99%