4.6 Article

An Explanatory Study on User Behavior in Discovering Aggregated Multimedia Web Content

Journal

IEEE ACCESS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages 56316-56330

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3177597

Keywords

Task analysis; Search engines; Behavioral sciences; Streaming media; Web search; Multimedia systems; Organizations; User behavior analysis; information discovery; information seeking; multimedia information; visualization; search engines

Funding

  1. Prince Sultan University

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Recent advancements in the web have allowed users to generate multimedia content, leading to a proliferation of multimedia information. While existing search engines provide access to multimedia content through media-specific results, this decentralized approach requires manual aggregation and synthesis by users, hindering the information exploration process and potentially causing cognitive overload. This study investigates users' complex multimedia information-seeking behavior in state-of-the-art web search systems to uncover the issues users face. The findings reveal inadequacies in search engines in meeting users' discovery needs and suggest statistically significant research recommendations for multimedia information exploration-related endeavors.
The recent advancements in the web allow users to generate multimedia content, resulting in multimedia information proliferation. Existing search engines provide access to multimedia content via a disjoint assembly of media-specific results called verticals. However, this decentralized assembly of media contents requires manual aggregation and synthesizing efforts at the user's end, hindering the information exploration process and subsequently may cause cognitive overload, hence, demanding innovative tools to discover multimedia content. The researchers have devised numerous state-of-the-art approaches; however, analysis to confirm the efficacy has little emphasis. This study investigates users' complex multimedia information-seeking behavior over state-of-the-art web search systems to unveil the user's information-seeking issues. Our research employs between-subjects study and post hoc analysis strategies to analyze participants' information-seeking characteristics. The study design adopted statistical hypothesis testing to consolidate previous user behavioral studies, confirm existing strategies, and present recommended practices for future general-purpose web search engines. The participants were assigned Google and an advanced discovery search system using the same multimedia dataset to ensure the obtained results' credibility. The primary behavioral parameters include search efforts, multimedia content exploration, search user interface (SUI), information management and presentation, and user cognition. This study uncovers several inadequacies of the search engines in meeting users' complex discovery needs, including 29.6% less user engagement, 43% system and searching dissatisfaction, and 32% less knowledge acquisition with 63.9% increased clicking effort on traditional search engines. The results confirmed previous user studies and suggest novel research recommendations statistically significant in multimedia information exploration-related endeavors.

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