I've been wondering about this for a while and I can't see why Google haven't tried it yet - or maybe they have and I just don't know about it.
Is there a search engine that you can type a question into which will give you a single answer rather than a list of results which you then have to trawl through yourself to find what you want to know?
For example, this is how I would design the system:
User’s input: “Where do you go to get your eyes tested?”
System output: “Opticians. Certainty: 95%”
This would be calculated as follows:
Due to the dispersed nature of the Internet, a correct answer is likely to appear multiple times, especially for simple questions. For this particular example, it wouldn’t be too hard for the system to recognise that this word keeps cropping up in the results and that it is almost certainly the answer being searched for.
For more complicated questions, a lower certainty would be shown, and possibly multiple results with different levels of certainty. The user would also be offered the chance to see the sources which the system calculated the results from.
The point of this system is that it simplifies searching. Many times when we use a search engine, we’re just looking for something really simple or trivial. Returning a long list of results doesn’t seem like the most efficient way of answering the question, even though the answer is almost certainly hidden away in those results.
Just take a look at the Google results for the above question to see my point: http://www.google.co.uk/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&ie=UTF-8&ion=1&nord=1#sclient=psy&hl=en&safe=off&nord=1&site=webhp&source=hp&q=Where%20do%20you%20go%20to%20get%20your%20eyes%20tested%3F&aq=&aqi=&aql=&oq=&pbx=1&fp=72566eb257565894&fp=72566eb257565894&ion=1
The results given don't immediately answer the question - they need to be searched through by the user before the answer they really want is found. Search engines are great directories. They're really good for giving you more information about a subject, or telling you where to find a service, but they're not so good at answering direct questions.
There are many aspects that would have to be considered when creating the system – for example a website’s accuracy would have to be taken into account when calculating results.
Although the system should work well for simple questions, it may be quite a task to make it work for more complicated ones. For example, common misconceptions would need to be handled as a special case. If the system finds evidence that the user’s question has a common misconception as an answer, it should either point this out when providing the answer, or even simply disregard the most common answer in favour of the one provided by the website that points out that it is a common misconception. This would all have to be weighed up by comparing the accuracy and quality of conflicting sources.
It's an interesting question and would involve a lot of research, but surely it would be worth the time and effort? It wouldn't always be right, but it would make simple queries a lot quicker for the user.
Google has no answer for questions about effort, worth, desire, character. We have these answers inside of us. School is a place for asking and answering these types of questions.
Place Questions in the Title This one is really powerful. Throwing a question into the H1 tag is something you should go for if you want to be featured in Direct Answers. By doing so, you provide Google robots with clear indicators for the topic covered on a particular page.
1. DuckDuckGo. There's a reason we put DuckDuckGo #1 in the list of best conservative search engines. The BIGGEST reason millions of people use DuckDuckGo is that it doesn't track you.
Bing. Bing is a search engine by Microsoft and is second in terms of market share after Google. It was launched in 2009, and its origin traces back to earlier search engines offered by Microsoft, such as MSN Search and Live Search. You can perform the same kind of searches on Bing as you would do on Google.
Such a system is called an automatic Question Answering (QA) system, or a Natural Language search engine. It is not to be confused with a social Question Answering service, where answers are produced by humans. QA is a well studied area, as evidenced by almost a decade of TREC QA track publications, but it is one of the more difficult tasks in the field of natural language processing (NLP) because it requires a wide range of intelligence (parsing, search, information extraction, coreference, inference). This may explain why there are relatively few freely available online systems today, most of which are more like demos. Several include:
Major search engines have shown interest in question answering technology. In an interview on Jun 1, 2011, Eric Scmidt said, Google’s new strategy for search is to provide answers, not just links. "'We can literally compute the right answer,' said Schmidt, referencing advances in artificial intelligence technology" (source).
Matthew Goltzbach, head of products for Google Enterprise has stated that "Question answering is the future of enterprise search." Yahoo has also forecasted that the future of search involves users getting real-time answers instead of links. These big players are incrementally introducing QA technology as a supplement to other kinds of search results, as seen in Google's "short answers".
While IBM's Jeopardy-playing Watson has done much to popularize machines answering question (or answers), many real-world challenges remain in the general form of question answering.
See also the related question on open source QA frameworks.
Update:
Wolfram Alpha
http://www.wolframalpha.com/
Wolfram Alpha (styled Wolfram|Alpha) is an answer engine developed by Wolfram Research. It is an online service that answers factual queries directly by computing the answer from structured data, rather than providing a list of documents or web pages that might contain the answer as a search engine would.[4] It was announced in March 2009 by Stephen Wolfram, and was released to the public on May 15, 2009.[1] It was voted the greatest computer innovation of 2009 by Popular Science.[5][6]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfram_Alpha
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