'Consumer Health Search on the Web: Study of Web Page Understandability and Its Integration in Ranking Algorithms' accepted at JMIR

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The journal paper titled ‘Consumer Health Search on the Web: Study of Web Page Understandability and Its Integration in Ranking Algorithms’ has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR). Authors of the paper are Joao Palotti, Guido Zuccon, and Allan Hanbury. Please visit the JMIR page to read and download.

The abstract of the journal article is made available below.

Background: Understandability plays a key role in ensuring that people accessing health information are capable of gaining insights that can assist them with their health concerns and choices. The access to unclear or misleading information has been shown to negatively impact the health decisions of the general public.

Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate methods to estimate the understandability of health Web pages and use these to improve the retrieval of information for people seeking health advice on the Web.

Methods: Our investigation considered methods to automatically estimate the understandability of health information in Web pages, and it provided a thorough evaluation of these methods using human assessments as well as an analysis of preprocessing factors affecting understandability estimations and associated pitfalls. Furthermore, lessons learned for estimating Web page understandability were applied to the construction of retrieval methods, with specific attention to retrieving information understandable by the general public.

Results: We found that machine learning techniques were more suitable to estimate health Web page understandability than traditional readability formulae, which are often used as guidelines and benchmark by health information providers on the Web (larger difference found for Pearson correlation of .602 using gradient boosting regressor compared with .438 using Simple Measure of Gobbledygook Index with the Conference and Labs of the Evaluation Forum eHealth 2015 collection).

Conclusions: The findings reported in this paper are important for specialized search services tailored to support the general public in seeking health advice on the Web, as they document and empirically validate state-of-the-art techniques and settings for this domain application.

Posted at Jan 30, 19 by ielab
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