Responding to Retrieval: A Proposal to Use Retrieval Information for Better Presentation of Website Content
C Ravindranath Chowdary, Anil Kumar Singh, Anil Nelakanti

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel approach where retrieval systems share query trend information with website content providers to enable dynamic content presentation, enhancing user search experience without compromising user privacy.
Contribution
It introduces a framework for sharing retrieval data with content providers to improve website content presentation in response to query trends.
Findings
Enhanced content presentation aligned with query trends.
Improved user search experience through dynamic content adaptation.
Facilitated collaboration between retrieval systems and content providers.
Abstract
Retrieval and content management are assumed to be mutually exclusive. In this paper we suggest that they need not be so. In the usual information retrieval scenario, some information about queries leading to a website (due to `hits' or `visits') is available to the server administrator of the concerned website. This information can used to better present the content on the website. Further, we suggest that some more information can be shared by the retrieval system with the content provider. This will enable the content provider (any website) to have a more dynamic presentation of the content that is in tune with the query trends, without violating the privacy of the querying user. The result will be a better synchronization between retrieval systems and content providers, with the purpose of improving the user's web search experience. This will also give the content provider a say in…
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