4.5 Article

The Matter of Chance: Auditing Web Search Results Related to the 2020 US Presidential Primary Elections Across Six Search Engines

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW
Volume 40, Issue 5, Pages 1323-1339

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/08944393211006863

Keywords

search engines; web search elections; U; S; elections; algorithmic auditing

Funding

  1. SNF [100001CL_182630/1]
  2. DFG [MA 2244/9-1]

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The study reveals substantial differences in search results among different search engines under non-personalized conditions, as well as discrepancies within results generated for different agents. The randomization of search results determines if users see certain information, and some search engines prioritize different categories of information sources for specific candidates.
We examine how six search engines filter and rank information in relation to the queries on the U.S. 2020 presidential primary elections under the default-that is nonpersonalized-conditions. For that, we utilize an algorithmic auditing methodology that uses virtual agents to conduct large-scale analysis of algorithmic information curation in a controlled environment. Specifically, we look at the text search results for us elections, donald trump, joe biden, bernie sanders queries on Google, Baidu, Bing, DuckDuckGo, Yahoo, and Yandex, during the 2020 primaries. Our findings indicate substantial differences in the search results between search engines and multiple discrepancies within the results generated for different agents using the same search engine. It highlights that whether users see certain information is decided by chance due to the inherent randomization of search results. We also find that some search engines prioritize different categories of information sources with respect to specific candidates. These observations demonstrate that algorithmic curation of political information can create information inequalities between the search engine users even under nonpersonalized conditions. Such inequalities are particularly troubling considering that search results are highly trusted by the public and can shift the opinions of undecided voters as demonstrated by previous research.

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