Search Strategies in Shopping Engines: An Experimental Investigation

Shopping engines of different designs were researched in respect to convenience as a mode of access to goods and services offered on the Web. Some shopping engines function autonomously in one stage, quickly maximizing decision accuracy as a function of several parameters. Others strongly involve th...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of electronic commerce 2006-10, Vol.11 (1), p.63-84
1. Verfasser: Kamis, Arnold
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container_title International journal of electronic commerce
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creator Kamis, Arnold
description Shopping engines of different designs were researched in respect to convenience as a mode of access to goods and services offered on the Web. Some shopping engines function autonomously in one stage, quickly maximizing decision accuracy as a function of several parameters. Others strongly involve the user, searching in multiple stages to satisfy decision accuracy requirements. Single-stage and multiple-stage shopping engines designed with two approaches, QuickSearch and AdaptiveSearch, were tested on 205 users trying to attain maximal accuracy with minimal effort. The best-performing shopping engine used two stages, QuickSearch first, then AdaptiveSearch. The results imply that QuickSearch and AdaptiveSearch, although logically equivalent, have different impacts on shopping for differentiated, multi-attribute goods and services. This suggests that shopping engines should be designed to first save the shopper effort and then provide attribute-focused support for examining the resulting set of items.
doi_str_mv 10.2753/JEC1086-4415110103
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subjects Accuracy
Commerce
Consumer behavior
Customers
Data envelopment analysis
decision support
Decision support systems
Electronic commerce
Engine design
Engines
Information storage and retrieval systems
on-line commerce
Online shopping
preference elicitation
recall
Search engines
Shopping
shopping engines
Studies
title Search Strategies in Shopping Engines: An Experimental Investigation
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