Spink, Amanda S.2022-04-072022-04-072003Özmutlu, S. vd. (2003). “Multitasking web searching and implications for design”. Proceedings of the Asist Annual Meeting, Asist 2003: Humanizing information technology: From ideas to bits and back, 40, 416-421.0044-7870https://doi.org/10.1002/meet.1450400150https://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/meet.1450400150http://hdl.handle.net/11452/25650Bu çalışma, Kaliforniya[ABD]'de 19-22 Ekim tarihleri arasında düzenlenen 66. Annual Meeting of the American-Society-for-Information-Science-and-Technology'de bildiri olarak sunulmuştur.This paper presents findings from a study of users multitasking searches on Web search engines. A user's single session with a Web search engine may consist of seeking information on single or multiple topics. Limited research has focused on multitasking search and the implications for Web design. Incidence of multitasking search by AlltheWeb.com and Excite Web search engine users were filtered from transaction logs. Findings include: (1) multitasking Web searches are a noticeable user behavior, one tenth of Excite users and one third of AlltheWeb.com users conducted multitasking searches, (2) multitasking search sessions are longer than regular search sessions in terms of queries per session and duration, (3) both Excite and AlltheWeb.corn users search for about three topics per multitasking session and submit about 4-5 queries per topic, and (4) there is a broad variety of search topics in multitasking search sessions. The implications of our findings for Web design and further research are discussed.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessComputer scienceInformation science and library scienceInformation-seekingMultitasking web searching and implications for designArticle0002283541000502-s2.0-444424246141642140Computer science, information systemsInformation science and library science66036606056603061328