Help : Research Tools: The Web and Search Engines


The Web and Search Engines

Web search engines are used to perform keyword searches in large databases of information culled from the Internet. To effectively use the three main types of search engines, it is important to understand what they are, how they work, and how they differ. If using the Web for research purposes, note that the electronic resources found in the Library Gateway as well as all of the materials in the Library Catalog have already been carefully evaluated by librarians and are recommended to be used in conjunction with general searches done on the Internet.

Active (Robot Assembled) Search Engines: Active search engines rely on computerized retrieval mechanisms. Referred to as "spiders", "crawlers", or "robots", these mechanisms visit Web sites and retrieve relevant keywords to index and store in a searchable database.

Advantages

Disadvantages

Examples

Alta Vista, HotBot, InfoSeek, Lycos, Excite

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Passive (Human-Selected) Search Engines

Passive search engines, often referred to as directories, are human controlled and do not roam the Web directly. They rely on individual submissions that are reviewed and indexed by subject category.

Advantages Disadvantages

Examples

Yahoo, LookSmart, Librarians' Index to the Internet

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Meta Search Engines

Meta search engines do not create their own databases. They rely on existing active and passive search engine indexes to retrieve search results.

Advantages Disadvantages

Examples

Dogpile, Metacrawler, Webcrawler

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Specialized Search Engines

Specialized search engines offer additional features that active, passive and meta search engines do not provide. Examples:

Google

Ask Jeeves

Northern Light

Rollyo

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