Information retrieval interaction
Information retrieval interaction
Information behaviour: an interdisciplinary perspective
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Children's Internet searching on complex problems: performance and process analyses
Journal of the American Society for Information Science - Special issue on user-centered cooperative systems
Communications of the ACM
Interactive Internet search: keyword, directory and query reformulation mechanisms compared
SIGIR '00 Proceedings of the 23rd annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
Web search behavior of Internet experts and newbies
Proceedings of the 9th international World Wide Web conference on Computer networks : the international journal of computer and telecommunications netowrking
Cognitive style and on-line database search experience as predictors of web search performance
Journal of the American Society for Information Science - Special topic issue: individual differences in virtual environments
Differences between novice and experienced users in searching information on the World Wide Web
Journal of the American Society for Information Science - Special topic issue: individual differences in virtual environments
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal
Web search strategies and approaches to studying
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
ACM SIGIR Forum
Frictionless Commerce? A Comparison of Internet and Conventional Retailers
Management Science
The development of initial trust in an online company by new customers
Information and Management
On the web at home: information seeking and web searching in the home environment
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology - Part I: Information seeking research
Web search strategies and human individual differences: A combined analysis: Research Articles
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
A Reassessment of the Efficacy of Self-Booking in Travel
HICSS '06 Proceedings of the 39th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences - Volume 06
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The internet continues to grow at an ever-increasing rate, with individuals receiving multiple responses to their online travel search queries. More than half of the individuals who search the internet are satisfied with their search results, but are unaware of the fact that the results which may appear first are most likely paid for by advertisers. In order to gain insight into the issues of bias susceptibility, an experiment was conducted to see how the attributes of trust, impatience, and search experience and search skill affected consumers' bias susceptibility. Those with a high degree of bias susceptibility are more likely to be tricked by bias information. Those with a low degree of bias susceptibility are predicted to be more likely to use multiple search interfaces to try to get more accurate and unbiased information.