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Post by account_disabled on Dec 11, 2023 5:50:51 GMT
This question revealed some interesting trends related to the oldest searchers. According to the results, the oldest searchers (age 10+) were more likely than the youngest searchers to strongly disagree that the information they found on affected their worldview. out. However, the oldest searchers are also the most likely to agree with this statement; respondents aged 10 and above strongly agree that information affects their worldview. At both ends of the spectrum, the oldest searchers appear to have stronger opinions than respondents in other age groups about the extent to which Google influences their political views and opinions. Featured Snippets and Knowledge Graphs We also wanted to understand the extent to which respondents C Level Contact List found the content contained in Featured Snippets to be credible, and to segment these responses by age group. As with other scale-based questions, respondents were asked to indicate on a scale (Likert scale) how much they trust these features. According to the results, the youngest searchers (years old) are more likely than the oldest searchers (years and older) to consider content in Featured Snippets to be very trustworthy. This is consistent with similar findings we found in last year’s survey that more than the oldest searchers without clicking on the snippet (or any) result. For the knowledge graph results, the results are less conclusive when broken down by age. Respondents of all ages found the knowledge panel's results to be at least trustworthy. Conclusion Younger users trust search results more than older users.
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