2010
DOI: 10.1177/1367877910376582
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Search engines and the production of academic knowledge

Abstract: • This article argues that search engines in general, and Google Scholar in particular, have become significant co-producers of academic knowledge. Knowledge is not simply conveyed to users, but is co-produced by search engines’ ranking systems and profiling systems, none of which are open to the rules of transparency, relevance and privacy in a manner known from library scholarship in the public domain. Inexperienced users tend to trust proprietary engines as neutral mediators of knowledge and are commonly ig… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
(31 reference statements)
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“…Google Scholar, on the other hand, should open its computer code to allow researchers to understand how hit lists are generated and how results are ordered. Google Scholar has been criticized by the scientific community for the obscurity of its search algorithms[22]. Although we acknowledge that this can be against business policies for some companies, we argue that compromises must be made for the sake of research integrity and scientific rigor.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Google Scholar, on the other hand, should open its computer code to allow researchers to understand how hit lists are generated and how results are ordered. Google Scholar has been criticized by the scientific community for the obscurity of its search algorithms[22]. Although we acknowledge that this can be against business policies for some companies, we argue that compromises must be made for the sake of research integrity and scientific rigor.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…We recognize them as tools directed to support the search for scientific information. At the same time, the use of academic databases is to cover more in-depth and specialized subjects [63,64]. Search engines are the primary source of online information, and the academic versions present additional features like benchmarking tools, rankings, and Scientometrics.…”
Section: Academic Search Enginesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, relative to the size of the web a very small proportion of sites dominate the top rankings (Vaughan and Thelwall, ; Tomlinson et al ., ). For Introna and Nisselbaum (: 692) the ‘politics of the search engine matters’, while Van Dijck () argues that knowledge is co‐produced by the profiling and ranking systems of search engines in ways that are concealed to the user.…”
Section: Knowledge Of Metropolitan Governance In the South Since The mentioning
confidence: 99%