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. 2016 Apr;104(2):143-5.
doi: 10.3163/1536-5050.104.2.009.

Variation in number of hits for complex searches in Google Scholar

Variation in number of hits for complex searches in Google Scholar

Wichor Matthijs Bramer. J Med Libr Assoc. 2016 Apr.

Abstract

Objective: Google Scholar is often used to search for medical literature. Numbers of results reported by Google Scholar outperform the numbers reported by traditional databases. How reliable are these numbers? Why are often not all available 1,000 references shown?

Methods: For several complex search strategies used in systematic review projects, the number of citations and the total number of versions were calculated. Several search strategies were followed over a two-year period, registering fluctuations in reported search results.

Results: Changes in numbers of reported search results varied enormously between search strategies and dates. Theories for calculations of the reported and shown number of hits were not proved.

Conclusions: The number of hits reported in Google Scholar is an unreliable measure. Therefore, its repeatability is problematic, at least when equal results are needed.

Keywords: Information Storage and Retrieval; Reproducibility of Results; Review Literature as Topic; Search Engine.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
The last results of a Google Scholar search shown on page 93. This page contains only 2 references; pages 94–100 are available but empty.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Changes in number of hits reported excluding citations by Google Scholar
Figure 3
Figure 3
Changes in number of hits reported including citations by Google Scholar

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References

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