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Top > Computers > Internet > Searching > Search Engines > Google > Research Papers

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» Papers by Googlers - Google supplies a partial list of papers written by people now at Google.
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» Method for Node Ranking in a Linked Database - United States Patent 7,058,628, granted to Lawrence Page, which incorporates material from two earlier patents relating to the PageRank system used by Google. (June 6, 2006)
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» Detecting Colluders in PageRank - PhD thesis by Kahn Mason on methods of discovering groups of websites that collude to boost their reputations, distorting the results of the PageRank algorithm. Stanford University. [PDF] (September, 2005)
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» Adaptive Methods for the Computation of PageRank - This paper by Sepandar Kamvar, Taher Haveliwala, and Gene Golub describes an algorithm to speed up the computation of PageRank using the fact that pages converge at different rates. [PDF] (April, 2003)
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» The Second Eigenvalue of the Google Matrix - This paper by Sepandar Kamvar and Taher Haveliwala proves analytically the second eigenvalue of the Google Matrix, which has implications for the PageRank algorithm. [PDF] (March, 2003)
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» United States Patent: 6,526,440 - Ranking search results by reranking the results based on local inter-connectivity. Inventor Krishna Bharat; assignee Google. (February 25, 2003)
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» Topic-Sensitive PageRank - Taher H. Haveliwala's paper for the 11th International World Wide Web Conference explains that Google proposes to make PageRank reflect importance with respect to a particular topic. (May, 2002)
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» Computing Iceberg Queries Efficiently - Paper by Min Fang, Narayanan Shivakumar, Hector Garcia-Molina, Rajeev Motwani, and Jeffrey D. Ullman, developing efficient execution strategies for a class of queries which perform an aggregate function over an attribute (or set of attributes) and then eliminates aggregate values that are below some specified threshold. [PDF] (November 11, 1999)
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» The PageRank Citation Ranking: Bringing Order to the Web - Stanford paper by Lawrence Page, Sergey Brin, Rajeev Motwani, and Terry Winograd, describing PageRank as a static ranking, performed at indexing time, which interprets a link as a vote. Available in Postscript, PDF, and plain text formats. (November 11, 1999)
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