2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.joi.2010.02.001
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Differences between web sessions according to the origin of their visits

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Cited by 26 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 21 publications
(23 reference statements)
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“…The assumption that the probability of leaving in each step is constant is consistent with the empirical observation that the number of websites visited during a session follows exponential decay; see, for example,Ortega and Aguillo [2010].…”
supporting
confidence: 67%
“…The assumption that the probability of leaving in each step is constant is consistent with the empirical observation that the number of websites visited during a session follows exponential decay; see, for example,Ortega and Aguillo [2010].…”
supporting
confidence: 67%
“…It is therefore important to characterize the probability distribution of session length k . Several studies presenting analyses of real Web server workloads suggest that session length follows a Weibull distribution, one of the heavy‐tailed distributions (Ortega and Aguillo ). The probability density function of session length can be expressed by Equation : f ( k ; λ , f 0 ) = f 0 × e λ × k where f 0 is the normalized initial probability of session length, and λ is the decay coefficient of the heavy‐tailed probability density curve.…”
Section: Help Workload For Wmts Performance Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The parameters of these probability distributions are studied and taken as inputs to guarantee accuracy of the generated workload. Many researchers have focused on Web workload characterization, including document size, transfer times, request arrivals, session length, think times (Barford et al 1999, Iyengar et al 1999, Busari and Williamson 2002, Latouche and Remiche 2002, Williams et al 2005, Ortega and Aguillo 2010.…”
Section: Workload Generation Approachesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several works focussed on analysing the search skill and attitudes of the principal search engine users such as AltaVista (Silverstein et al 1998), Excite and Alltheweb (Jansen et al 2005) and Yahoo! Data mining was used for the identification of web sessions; to estimate their duration and their length in clicks (Pitkow et al 1997); to classify content according to the pages requested by their visitors (Wang and Zaiane 2002) and to show navigational differences between different points of access (Ortega and Aguillo 2010). Data mining was used for the identification of web sessions; to estimate their duration and their length in clicks (Pitkow et al 1997); to classify content according to the pages requested by their visitors (Wang and Zaiane 2002) and to show navigational differences between different points of access (Ortega and Aguillo 2010).…”
Section: The Present and The Future: The Possibilitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%