2024
DOI: 10.1007/s42822-023-00155-0
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How a Daily Regimen of Operant Conditioning Might Explain the Power of the Search Engine Manipulation Effect (SEME)

Robert Epstein,
Michael Lothringer,
Vanessa R. Zankich

Abstract: Recent studies have shown that biased search results can produce substantial shifts in the opinions and voting preferences of undecided voters – a phenomenon called the “search engine manipulation effect” (SEME), one of the most powerful list effects ever discovered. We believe this is so because, unlike other list effects, SEME is supported by a daily regimen of operant conditioning. When people conduct searches for simple facts (86% of searches), the correct answer invariably turns up in the top position, wh… Show more

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“…To put this another way, the search engine is not only the most powerful tool ever invented for providing factual answers to simple questions, it might also be the most powerful tool ever invented for influencing people’s opinions, even if influence was never the intent. In a separate study [ 48 ] we examined this issue from the perspective of operant conditioning. About 86% of the searches people conduct on major search engines are for simple facts [ 49 ], and those facts almost invariably turn up in the top position of search results.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To put this another way, the search engine is not only the most powerful tool ever invented for providing factual answers to simple questions, it might also be the most powerful tool ever invented for influencing people’s opinions, even if influence was never the intent. In a separate study [ 48 ] we examined this issue from the perspective of operant conditioning. About 86% of the searches people conduct on major search engines are for simple facts [ 49 ], and those facts almost invariably turn up in the top position of search results.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%