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SEARCH-LOGS
Psychic analysis of AOL usersand their search logs |
Here is search logs of 650,000 AOL users. It's very interesting to view search history of particular person and analyze his personality. Let's do it together! Read more about AOL search database scandal or view research papers on web searching. |
Personality analysis
UPDATE by max:This user asked me to remove his profile, so I deleted the logs and the great investigation made by our anonymous visitor.
Max_Evil 13:18 25 Aug 06
Hello!
If I can do something with this site to help in your searches, please contact me at http://aolpsycho.blogspot.com/2006/08/feedback-on-aolpsychocom.html or at max@zanoza.lv
Right now I implement free text search here at aolpsycho. The database is being indexed, ~5 days left until search will be available.
PS. We can make a special tag for big fish identifications (big fish?), and put these people on the main page.
So please feel free to share your ideas. And excuse my eng:)
20:27 25 Aug 06
I think maybe a notable tag would be useful.
To find notable people I search for terms only they would use:
Military: mypay, ako, nko, security clearance
Credit Unions: navyfcu, congressionalfcu, etc. Ones that have an elite membership.
Private Clubs: rotary club, press club, cosmos club.
I need more good credit unions and private clubs.
I would really like the ability to do a filtered search: find all those users who searched for mypay and also searched for iraq in another query.
Max_Evil 20:42 25 Aug 06
Ok, tonight I will run queries to tag military, credit unions and private club users. Then I'll implement filtered search by tags.
Free text search is not available yet, so I have to run queries through DB manually, and every search takes ~5 minutes:(
So can you give me more search terms?
21:36 25 Aug 06
Well for myself I don't find tagging everyone who searched for some of these terms useful right now, because there are too many false positives and uninteresting users, and I cannot search on them easily.
I find the tags useful for categorizing after the user has been found to be interesting and has been analyzed.
Maybe there should be a way to distinguish the two kinds of tags?
If regexp-tags of this sort could be specified during a fast search, then they would be useful. For example, find all users with the military regexp-tag who searched for IED.