Pageranking
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

PageRank (PR) is an algorithm used by Google Search to rank web pages in their
search engine A search engine is a software system designed to carry out web searches. They search the World Wide Web in a systematic way for particular information specified in a textual web search query. The search results are generally presented in a ...
results. It is named after both the term "web page" and co-founder Larry Page. PageRank is a way of measuring the importance of website pages. According to Google: Currently, PageRank is not the only algorithm used by Google to order search results, but it is the first algorithm that was used by the company, and it is the best known. As of September 24, 2019, PageRank and all associated patents are expired.


Description

PageRank is a link analysis algorithm and it assigns a numerical weighting to each element of a
hyperlink In computing, a hyperlink, or simply a link, is a digital reference to data that the user can follow or be guided by clicking or tapping. A hyperlink points to a whole document or to a specific element within a document. Hypertext is text wit ...
ed
set Set, The Set, SET or SETS may refer to: Science, technology, and mathematics Mathematics *Set (mathematics), a collection of elements *Category of sets, the category whose objects and morphisms are sets and total functions, respectively Electro ...
of documents, such as the World Wide Web, with the purpose of "measuring" its relative importance within the set. The algorithm may be applied to any collection of entities with reciprocal quotations and references. The numerical weight that it assigns to any given element ''E'' is referred to as the ''PageRank of E'' and denoted by PR(E). A PageRank results from a mathematical algorithm based on the webgraph, created by all World Wide Web pages as nodes and
hyperlink In computing, a hyperlink, or simply a link, is a digital reference to data that the user can follow or be guided by clicking or tapping. A hyperlink points to a whole document or to a specific element within a document. Hypertext is text wit ...
s as edges, taking into consideration authority hubs such as cnn.com or
mayoclinic.org The Mayo Clinic () is a nonprofit American academic medical center focused on integrated health care, education, and research. It employs over 4,500 physicians and scientists, along with another 58,400 administrative and allied health staf ...
. The rank value indicates an importance of a particular page. A hyperlink to a page counts as a vote of support. The PageRank of a page is defined recursively and depends on the number and PageRank metric of all pages that link to it (" incoming links"). A page that is linked to by many pages with high PageRank receives a high rank itself. Numerous academic papers concerning PageRank have been published since Page and Brin's original paper. In practice, the PageRank concept may be vulnerable to manipulation. Research has been conducted into identifying falsely influenced PageRank rankings. The goal is to find an effective means of ignoring links from documents with falsely influenced PageRank. Other link-based ranking algorithms for Web pages include the HITS algorithm invented by Jon Kleinberg (used by
Teoma Teoma (from Scottish Gaelic ''teòma'' "expert") was an Internet search engine founded in April 2000 by Professor Apostolos Gerasoulis and his colleagues at Rutgers University in New Jersey. Professor Tao Yang from the University of California, Sa ...
and now
Ask.com Ask.com (originally known as Ask Jeeves) is a question answering–focused e-business founded in 1996 by Garrett Gruener and David Warthen in Berkeley, California, Berkeley, California. The original software was implemented by Gary Chevsky, from ...
), the IBM
CLEVER project The CLEVER project was a research project in Web search led by Jon Kleinberg at IBM's Almaden Research Center. Techniques developed in CLEVER included various forms of link analysis, including the HITS algorithm. Features The CLEVER search engi ...
, the TrustRank algorithm and the
Hummingbird Hummingbirds are birds native to the Americas and comprise the biological family Trochilidae. With about 361 species and 113 genera, they occur from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego, but the vast majority of the species are found in the tropics aro ...
algorithm.


History

The eigenvalue problem behind PageRank's algorithm was independently rediscovered and reused in many scoring problems. In 1895, Edmund Landau suggested using it for determining the winner of a chess tournament. The eigenvalue problem was also suggested in 1976 by Gabriel Pinski and Francis Narin, who worked on
scientometrics Scientometrics is the field of study which concerns itself with measuring and analysing scholarly literature. Scientometrics is a sub-field of informetrics. Major research issues include the measurement of the impact of research papers and academi ...
ranking scientific journals, in 1977 by
Thomas Saaty Thomas L. Saaty (July 18, 1926 – August 14, 2017) was a Distinguished University Professor at the University of Pittsburgh, where he taught in the Joseph M. Katz Graduate School of Business. He is the inventor, architect, and primary theoreticia ...
in his concept of Analytic Hierarchy Process which weighted alternative choices, and in 1995 by Bradley Love and Steven Sloman as a cognitive model for concepts, the centrality algorithm. A search engine called " RankDex" from IDD Information Services, designed by Robin Li in 1996, developed a strategy for site-scoring and page-ranking. Li referred to his search mechanism as "link analysis," which involved ranking the popularity of a web site based on how many other sites had linked to it. RankDex, the first search engine with page-ranking and site-scoring algorithms, was launched in 1996."About: RankDex"
, RankDex; accessed 3 May 2014.
Li filed a patent for the technology in RankDex in 1997; it was granted in 1999. He later used it when he founded Baidu in China in 2000. Google founder Larry Page referenced Li's work as a citation in some of his U.S. patents for PageRank. Larry Page and Sergey Brin developed PageRank at
Stanford University Stanford University, officially Leland Stanford Junior University, is a private research university in Stanford, California. The campus occupies , among the largest in the United States, and enrolls over 17,000 students. Stanford is consider ...
in 1996 as part of a research project about a new kind of search engine. An interview with
Héctor García-Molina Héctor García-Molina (15 November 1954-25 November 2019) was a Mexican-American computer scientist and Professor in the Departments of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering at Stanford University. He was advisor to Sergey Brin, the founde ...
: Stanford Computer Science Professor and Advisor to Sergey provides background into the development of the page-rank algorithm. Sergey Brin had the idea that information on the web could be ordered in a hierarchy by "link popularity": a page ranks higher as there are more links to it.187-page study from Graz University, Austria
, includes the note that also human brains are used when determining the page rank in Google.
The system was developed with the help of Scott Hassan and Alan Steremberg, both of whom were cited by Page and Brin as being critical to the development of Google.
Rajeev Motwani Rajeev Motwani (Hindi: राजीव मोटवानी , March 24, 1962 – June 5, 2009) was an Indian American professor of Computer Science at Stanford University whose research focused on theoretical computer science. He was an early ad ...
and Terry Winograd co-authored with Page and Brin the first paper about the project, describing PageRank and the initial prototype of the Google search engine, published in 1998. Shortly after, Page and Brin founded
Google Inc. Google LLC () is an American multinational technology company focusing on search engine technology, online advertising, cloud computing, computer software, quantum computing, e-commerce, artificial intelligence, and consumer electronics. I ...
, the company behind the Google search engine. While just one of many factors that determine the ranking of Google search results, PageRank continues to provide the basis for all of Google's web-search tools. The name "PageRank" plays on the name of developer Larry Page, as well as of the concept of a web page. The word is a trademark of Google, and the PageRank process has been patented (). However, the patent is assigned to Stanford University and not to Google. Google has exclusive license rights on the patent from Stanford University. The university received 1.8 million shares of Google in exchange for use of the patent; it sold the shares in 2005 for
US$ The United States dollar (symbol: $; code: USD; also abbreviated US$ or U.S. Dollar, to distinguish it from other dollar-denominated currencies; referred to as the dollar, U.S. dollar, American dollar, or colloquially buck) is the official ...
336 million. PageRank was influenced by citation analysis, early developed by Eugene Garfield in the 1950s at the University of Pennsylvania, and by
Hyper Search Hyper Search is a method of link analysis for search engines. It was created by Italian researcher Massimo Marchiori. Bibliography * Massimo Marchiori"The Quest for Correct Information on the Web: Hyper Search Engines" ''Proceedings of the Sixth ...
, developed by
Massimo Marchiori Massimo Marchiori (Padua, 1970) is an Italian mathematician and computer scientist. Biography In July, 2004, he was awarded the TR35 prize by Technology Review (the best 35 researchers in the world under the age of 35). He is Professor in Comp ...
at the University of Padua. In the same year PageRank was introduced (1998), Jon Kleinberg published his work on
HITS Hits or H.I.T.S. may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Music * ''H.I.T.S.'', 1991 album by New Kids on the Block * ''...Hits'' (Phil Collins album), 1998 * ''Hits'' (compilation series), 1984–2006; 2014 - a British compilation album se ...
. Google's founders cite Garfield, Marchiori, and Kleinberg in their original papers., published as a technical report on January 29, 199
PDF


Algorithm

The PageRank algorithm outputs a
probability distribution In probability theory and statistics, a probability distribution is the mathematical function that gives the probabilities of occurrence of different possible outcomes for an experiment. It is a mathematical description of a random phenomenon i ...
used to represent the likelihood that a person randomly clicking on links will arrive at any particular page. PageRank can be calculated for collections of documents of any size. It is assumed in several research papers that the distribution is evenly divided among all documents in the collection at the beginning of the computational process. The PageRank computations require several passes, called "iterations", through the collection to adjust approximate PageRank values to more closely reflect the theoretical true value. A probability is expressed as a numeric value between 0 and 1. A 0.5 probability is commonly expressed as a "50% chance" of something happening. Hence, a document with a PageRank of 0.5 means there is a 50% chance that a person clicking on a random link will be directed to said document.


Simplified algorithm

Assume a small universe of four web pages: A, B, C, and D. Links from a page to itself are ignored. Multiple outbound links from one page to another page are treated as a single link. PageRank is initialized to the same value for all pages. In the original form of PageRank, the sum of PageRank over all pages was the total number of pages on the web at that time, so each page in this example would have an initial value of 1. However, later versions of PageRank, and the remainder of this section, assume a
probability distribution In probability theory and statistics, a probability distribution is the mathematical function that gives the probabilities of occurrence of different possible outcomes for an experiment. It is a mathematical description of a random phenomenon i ...
between 0 and 1. Hence the initial value for each page in this example is 0.25. The PageRank transferred from a given page to the targets of its outbound links upon the next iteration is divided equally among all outbound links. If the only links in the system were from pages B, C, and D to A, each link would transfer 0.25 PageRank to A upon the next iteration, for a total of 0.75. :PR(A)= PR(B) + PR(C) + PR(D).\, Suppose instead that page B had a link to pages C and A, page C had a link to page A, and page D had links to all three pages. Thus, upon the first iteration, page B would transfer half of its existing value (0.125) to page A and the other half (0.125) to page C. Page C would transfer all of its existing value (0.25) to the only page it links to, A. Since D had three outbound links, it would transfer one third of its existing value, or approximately 0.083, to A. At the completion of this iteration, page A will have a PageRank of approximately 0.458. :PR(A)= \frac+ \frac+ \frac.\, In other words, the PageRank conferred by an outbound link is equal to the document's own PageRank score divided by the number of outbound links L( ). :PR(A)= \frac+ \frac+ \frac. \, In the general case, the PageRank value for any page u can be expressed as: :PR(u) = \sum_ \frac, i.e. the PageRank value for a page u is dependent on the PageRank values for each page v contained in the set Bu (the set containing all pages linking to page u), divided by the number ''L''(''v'') of links from page v.


Damping factor

The PageRank theory holds that an imaginary surfer who is randomly clicking on links will eventually stop clicking. The probability, at any step, that the person will continue is a damping factor ''d''. Various studies have tested different damping factors, but it is generally assumed that the damping factor will be set around 0.85. The damping factor is subtracted from 1 (and in some variations of the algorithm, the result is divided by the number of documents (''N'') in the collection) and this term is then added to the product of the damping factor and the sum of the incoming PageRank scores. That is, : PR(A) = + d \left( \frac+ \frac+ \frac+\,\cdots \right). So any page's PageRank is derived in large part from the PageRanks of other pages. The damping factor adjusts the derived value downward. The original paper, however, gave the following formula, which has led to some confusion: : PR(A)= 1 - d + d \left( \frac+ \frac+ \frac+\,\cdots \right). The difference between them is that the PageRank values in the first formula sum to one, while in the second formula each PageRank is multiplied by ''N'' and the sum becomes ''N''. A statement in Page and Brin's paper that "the sum of all PageRanks is one" and claims by other Google employees support the first variant of the formula above. Page and Brin confused the two formulas in their most popular paper "The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine", where they mistakenly claimed that the latter formula formed a probability distribution over web pages. Google recalculates PageRank scores each time it crawls the Web and rebuilds its index. As Google increases the number of documents in its collection, the initial approximation of PageRank decreases for all documents. The formula uses a model of a ''random surfer'' who reaches their target site after several clicks, then switches to a random page. The PageRank value of a page reflects the chance that the random surfer will land on that page by clicking on a link. It can be understood as a
Markov chain A Markov chain or Markov process is a stochastic model describing a sequence of possible events in which the probability of each event depends only on the state attained in the previous event. Informally, this may be thought of as, "What happe ...
in which the states are pages, and the transitions are the links between pages – all of which are all equally probable. If a page has no links to other pages, it becomes a sink and therefore terminates the random surfing process. If the random surfer arrives at a sink page, it picks another
URL A Uniform Resource Locator (URL), colloquially termed as a web address, is a reference to a web resource that specifies its location on a computer network and a mechanism for retrieving it. A URL is a specific type of Uniform Resource Identifie ...
at random and continues surfing again. When calculating PageRank, pages with no outbound links are assumed to link out to all other pages in the collection. Their PageRank scores are therefore divided evenly among all other pages. In other words, to be fair with pages that are not sinks, these random transitions are added to all nodes in the Web. This residual probability, ''d'', is usually set to 0.85, estimated from the frequency that an average surfer uses his or her browser's bookmark feature. So, the equation is as follows: :PR(p_i) = \frac + d \sum_ \frac where p_1, p_2, ..., p_N are the pages under consideration, M(p_i) is the set of pages that link to p_i, L(p_j) is the number of outbound links on page p_j, and N is the total number of pages. The PageRank values are the entries of the dominant right eigenvector of the modified adjacency matrix rescaled so that each column adds up to one. This makes PageRank a particularly elegant metric: the eigenvector is : \mathbf = \begin PR(p_1) \\ PR(p_2) \\ \vdots \\ PR(p_N) \end where R is the solution of the equation : \mathbf = \begin \\ \\ \vdots \\ \end + d \begin \ell(p_1,p_1) & \ell(p_1,p_2) & \cdots & \ell(p_1,p_N) \\ \ell(p_2,p_1) & \ddots & & \vdots \\ \vdots & & \ell(p_i,p_j) & \\ \ell(p_N,p_1) & \cdots & & \ell(p_N,p_N) \end \mathbf where the adjacency function \ell(p_i,p_j) is the ratio between number of links outbound from page j to page i to the total number of outbound links of page j. The adjacency function is 0 if page p_j does not link to p_i, and normalized such that, for each ''j'' :\sum_^N \ell(p_i,p_j) = 1, i.e. the elements of each column sum up to 1, so the matrix is a stochastic matrix (for more details see the
computation Computation is any type of arithmetic or non-arithmetic calculation that follows a well-defined model (e.g., an algorithm). Mechanical or electronic devices (or, historically, people) that perform computations are known as ''computers''. An es ...
section below). Thus this is a variant of the eigenvector centrality measure used commonly in
network analysis Network analysis can refer to: * Network theory, the analysis of relations through mathematical graphs ** Social network analysis, network theory applied to social relations * Network analysis (electrical circuits) See also *Network planning and ...
. Because of the large eigengap of the modified adjacency matrix above, the values of the PageRank eigenvector can be approximated to within a high degree of accuracy within only a few iterations. Google's founders, in their original paper, reported that the PageRank algorithm for a network consisting of 322 million links (in-edges and out-edges) converges to within a tolerable limit in 52 iterations. The convergence in a network of half the above size took approximately 45 iterations. Through this data, they concluded the algorithm can be scaled very well and that the scaling factor for extremely large networks would be roughly linear in , where n is the size of the network. As a result of Markov theory, it can be shown that the PageRank of a page is the probability of arriving at that page after a large number of clicks. This happens to equal t^ where t is the
expectation Expectation or Expectations may refer to: Science * Expectation (epistemic) * Expected value, in mathematical probability theory * Expectation value (quantum mechanics) * Expectation–maximization algorithm, in statistics Music * ''Expectation' ...
of the number of clicks (or random jumps) required to get from the page back to itself. One main disadvantage of PageRank is that it favors older pages. A new page, even a very good one, will not have many links unless it is part of an existing site (a site being a densely connected set of pages, such as Wikipedia). Several strategies have been proposed to accelerate the computation of PageRank. Various strategies to manipulate PageRank have been employed in concerted efforts to improve search results rankings and monetize advertising links. These strategies have severely impacted the reliability of the PageRank concept, which purports to determine which documents are actually highly valued by the Web community. Since December 2007, when it started ''actively'' penalizing sites selling paid text links, Google has combatted link farms and other schemes designed to artificially inflate PageRank. How Google identifies link farms and other PageRank manipulation tools is among Google's trade secrets.


Computation

PageRank can be computed either iteratively or algebraically. The iterative method can be viewed as the power iteration method or the power method. The basic mathematical operations performed are identical.


Iterative

At t=0, an initial probability distribution is assumed, usually :PR(p_i; 0) = \frac. where N is the total number of pages, and p_i; 0 is page i at time 0. At each time step, the computation, as detailed above, yields :PR(p_i;t+1) = \frac + d \sum_ \frac where d is the damping factor, or in matrix notation where \mathbf_i(t)=PR(p_i; t) and \mathbf is the column vector of length N containing only ones. The matrix \mathcal is defined as : \mathcal_ = \begin 1 /L(p_j) , & \mboxj\mboxi\ \\ 0, & \mbox \end i.e., :\mathcal := (K^ A)^T, where A denotes the adjacency matrix of the graph and K is the diagonal matrix with the outdegrees in the diagonal. The probability calculation is made for each page at a time point, then repeated for the next time point. The computation ends when for some small \epsilon :, \mathbf(t+1) - \mathbf(t), < \epsilon, i.e., when convergence is assumed.


Power method

If the matrix \mathcal is a transition probability, i.e., column-stochastic and \mathbf is a probability distribution (i.e., , \mathbf, =1, \mathbf\mathbf=\mathbf where \mathbf is matrix of all ones), then equation () is equivalent to Hence PageRank \mathbf is the principal eigenvector of \widehat. A fast and easy way to compute this is using the power method: starting with an arbitrary vector x(0), the operator \widehat is applied in succession, i.e., : x(t+1) = \widehat x(t), until :, x(t+1) - x(t), < \epsilon. Note that in equation () the matrix on the right-hand side in the parenthesis can be interpreted as : \frac \mathbf = (1-d)\mathbf \mathbf^t, where \mathbf is an initial probability distribution. n the current case :\mathbf := \frac \mathbf. Finally, if \mathcal has columns with only zero values, they should be replaced with the initial probability vector \mathbf. In other words, :\mathcal^\prime := \mathcal + \mathcal, where the matrix \mathcal is defined as :\mathcal := \mathbf \mathbf^t, with : \mathbf_i = \begin 1, & \mboxL(p_i)=0\ \\ 0, & \mbox \end In this case, the above two computations using \mathcal only give the same PageRank if their results are normalized: : \mathbf_ = \frac = \frac.


Implementation


Scala/

Apache Spark Apache Spark is an open-source unified analytics engine for large-scale data processing. Spark provides an interface for programming clusters with implicit data parallelism and fault tolerance. Originally developed at the University of Californi ...

A typical example is using Scala's functional programming with Apache Spark RDDs to iteratively compute Page Ranks. object SparkPageRank


MATLAB/

Octave In music, an octave ( la, octavus: eighth) or perfect octave (sometimes called the diapason) is the interval between one musical pitch and another with double its frequency. The octave relationship is a natural phenomenon that has been refer ...

% Parameter M adjacency matrix where M_i,j represents the link from 'j' to 'i', such that for all 'j' % sum(i, M_i,j) = 1 % Parameter d damping factor % Parameter v_quadratic_error quadratic error for v % Return v, a vector of ranks such that v_i is the i-th rank from
, 1 The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline (t ...
function = rank2(M, d, v_quadratic_error) N = size(M, 2); % N is equal to either dimension of M and the number of documents v = rand(N, 1); v = v ./ norm(v, 1); % This is now L1, not L2 last_v = ones(N, 1) * inf; M_hat = (d .* M) + (((1 - d) / N) .* ones(N, N)); while (norm(v - last_v, 2) > v_quadratic_error) last_v = v; v = M_hat * v; % removed the L2 norm of the iterated PR end end %function
Example of code calling the rank function defined above: M = 0 0 0 1 ; 0.5 0 0 0 0 ; 0.5 0 0 0 0 ; 0 1 0.5 0 0 ; 0 0 0.5 1 0 rank2(M, 0.80, 0.001)


Python

"""PageRank algorithm with explicit number of iterations. Returns ------- ranking of nodes (pages) in the adjacency matrix """ import numpy as np def pagerank(M, num_iterations: int = 100, d: float = 0.85): """PageRank: The trillion dollar algorithm. Parameters ---------- M : numpy array adjacency matrix where M_i,j represents the link from 'j' to 'i', such that for all 'j' sum(i, M_i,j) = 1 num_iterations : int, optional number of iterations, by default 100 d : float, optional damping factor, by default 0.85 Returns ------- numpy array a vector of ranks such that v_i is the i-th rank from
, 1 The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline (t ...
v sums to 1 """ N = M.shape v = np.ones(N) / N M_hat = (d * M + (1 - d) / N) for i in range(num_iterations): v = M_hat @ v return v M = np.array(
0, 0, 0, 0, 1 The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline o ...
.5, 0, 0, 0, 0 .5, 0, 0, 0, 0
, 1, 0.5, 0, 0 The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline ...
, 0, 0.5, 1, 0 The comma is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark () in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline ...
) v = pagerank(M, 100, 0.85)
This example takes ≈13 iterations to converge.


Variations


PageRank of an undirected graph

The PageRank of an undirected graph G is statistically close to the degree distribution of the graph G, but they are generally not identical: If R is the PageRank vector defined above, and D is the degree distribution vector : D = \begin \deg(p_1) \\ \deg(p_2) \\ \vdots \\ \deg(p_N) \end where \deg(p_i) denotes the degree of vertex p_i, and E is the edge-set of the graph, then, with Y=\mathbf, shows that: \, Y-D\, _1\leq \, R-D\, _1\leq \, Y-D\, _1, that is, the PageRank of an undirected graph equals to the degree distribution vector if and only if the graph is regular, i.e., every vertex has the same degree.


Ranking objects of two kinds

A generalization of PageRank for the case of ranking two interacting groups of objects was described by Daugulis. In applications it may be necessary to model systems having objects of two kinds where a weighted relation is defined on object pairs. This leads to considering
bipartite graphs In the mathematical field of graph theory, a bipartite graph (or bigraph) is a graph whose vertices can be divided into two disjoint and independent sets U and V, that is every edge connects a vertex in U to one in V. Vertex sets U and V are ...
. For such graphs two related positive or nonnegative irreducible matrices corresponding to vertex partition sets can be defined. One can compute rankings of objects in both groups as eigenvectors corresponding to the maximal positive eigenvalues of these matrices. Normed eigenvectors exist and are unique by the Perron or Perron–Frobenius theorem. Example: consumers and products. The relation weight is the product consumption rate.


Distributed algorithm for PageRank computation

Sarma et al. describe two random walk-based distributed algorithms for computing PageRank of nodes in a network. One algorithm takes O(\log n/\epsilon) rounds with high probability on any graph (directed or undirected), where n is the network size and \epsilon is the reset probability ( 1-\epsilon, which is called the damping factor) used in the PageRank computation. They also present a faster algorithm that takes O(\sqrt/\epsilon) rounds in undirected graphs. In both algorithms, each node processes and sends a number of bits per round that are polylogarithmic in n, the network size.


Google Toolbar

The Google Toolbar long had a PageRank feature which displayed a visited page's PageRank as a whole number between 0 (least popular) and 10 (most popular). Google had not disclosed the specific method for determining a Toolbar PageRank value, which was to be considered only a rough indication of the value of a website. The "Toolbar Pagerank" was available for verified site maintainers through the Google Webmaster Tools interface. However, on October 15, 2009, a Google employee confirmed that the company had removed PageRank from its ''Webmaster Tools'' section, saying that "We've been telling people for a long time that they shouldn't focus on PageRank so much. Many site owners seem to think it's the most important metric for them to track, which is simply not true." The "Toolbar Pagerank" was updated very infrequently. It was last updated in November 2013. In October 2014 Matt Cutts announced that another visible pagerank update would not be coming. In March 2016 Google announced it would no longer support this feature, and the underlying API would soon cease to operate. On April 15, 2016 Google turned off display of PageRank Data in Google Toolbar, though the PageRank continued to be used internally to rank content in search results.


SERP rank

The search engine results page (SERP) is the actual result returned by a search engine in response to a keyword query. The SERP consists of a list of links to web pages with associated text snippets. The SERP rank of a web page refers to the placement of the corresponding link on the SERP, where higher placement means higher SERP rank. The SERP rank of a web page is a function not only of its PageRank, but of a relatively large and continuously adjusted set of factors (over 200). Search engine optimization (SEO) is aimed at influencing the SERP rank for a website or a set of web pages. Positioning of a webpage on Google SERPs for a keyword depends on relevance and reputation, also known as authority and popularity. PageRank is Google's indication of its assessment of the reputation of a webpage: It is non-keyword specific. Google uses a combination of webpage and website authority to determine the overall authority of a webpage competing for a keyword. The PageRank of the HomePage of a website is the best indication Google offers for website authority. After the introduction of
Google Places Google Maps is a web mapping platform and consumer application offered by Google. It offers satellite imagery, aerial photography, street maps, 360° interactive panoramic views of streets ( Street View), real-time traffic conditions, and rou ...
into the mainstream organic SERP, numerous other factors in addition to PageRank affect ranking a business in Local Business Results. When Google elaborated on the reasons for PageRank deprecation at Q&A #March 2016, they announced Links and Content as the Top Ranking Factors. RankBrain had earlier in October 2015 been announced as the #3 Ranking Factor, so the Top 3 Factors have been confirmed officially by Google.


Google directory PageRank

The Google Directory PageRank was an 8-unit measurement. Unlike the Google Toolbar, which shows a numeric PageRank value upon mouseover of the green bar, the Google Directory only displayed the bar, never the numeric values. Google Directory was closed on July 20, 2011.


False or spoofed PageRank

It was known that the PageRank shown in the Toolbar could easily be spoofed. Redirection from one page to another, either via a HTTP 302 response or a "Refresh" meta tag, caused the source page to acquire the PageRank of the destination page. Hence, a new page with PR 0 and no incoming links could have acquired PR 10 by redirecting to the Google home page. Spoofing can usually be detected by performing a Google search for a source URL; if the URL of an entirely different site is displayed in the results, the latter URL may represent the destination of a redirection.


Manipulating PageRank

For search engine optimization purposes, some companies offer to sell high PageRank links to webmasters. As links from higher-PR pages are believed to be more valuable, they tend to be more expensive. It can be an effective and viable marketing strategy to buy link advertisements on content pages of quality and relevant sites to drive traffic and increase a webmaster's link popularity. However, Google has publicly warned webmasters that if they are or were discovered to be selling links for the purpose of conferring PageRank and reputation, their links will be devalued (ignored in the calculation of other pages' PageRanks). The practice of buying and selling is intensely debated across the Webmaster community. Google advised webmasters to use the nofollow HTML attribute value on paid links. According to Matt Cutts, Google is concerned about webmasters who try to game the system, and thereby reduce the quality and relevance of Google search results. In 2019, Google offered a new type of tags that do not pass "link juice" and thus do not have value for SEO link manipulation: rel="ugc" as a tag for user-generated content, such as comments; and rel="sponsored" tag for advertisements or other types of sponsored content. Even though PageRank has become less important for SEO purposes, the existence of back-links from more popular websites continues to push a webpage higher up in search rankings.


Directed Surfer Model

A more intelligent surfer that probabilistically hops from page to page depending on the content of the pages and query terms the surfer is looking for. This model is based on a query-dependent PageRank score of a page which as the name suggests is also a function of query. When given a multiple-term query, Q=\, the surfer selects a q according to some probability distribution, P(q), and uses that term to guide its behavior for a large number of steps. It then selects another term according to the distribution to determine its behavior, and so on. The resulting distribution over visited web pages is QD-PageRank.


Social components

Katja Mayer views PageRank as a social network as it connects differing viewpoints and thoughts in a single place. People go to PageRank for information and are flooded with
citation A citation is a reference to a source. More precisely, a citation is an abbreviated alphanumeric expression embedded in the body of an intellectual work that denotes an entry in the bibliographic references section of the work for the purpose of ...
s of other authors who also have an opinion on the topic. This creates a social aspect where everything can be discussed and collected to provoke thinking. There is a social relationship that exists between PageRank and the people who use it as it is constantly adapting and changing to the shifts in modern society. Viewing the relationship between PageRank and the individual through sociometry allows for an in-depth look at the connection that results. Matteo Pasquinelli reckons the basis for the belief that PageRank has a social component lies in the idea of
attention economy Attention economics is an approach to the management of information that treats human attention as a scarce commodity and applies economic theory to solve various information management problems. According to Matthew Crawford, "Attention is a r ...
. With attention economy, value is placed on products that receive a greater amount of human attention and the results at the top of the PageRank garner a larger amount of focus then those on subsequent pages. The outcomes with the higher PageRank will therefore enter the human consciousness to a larger extent. These ideas can influence decision-making and the actions of the viewer have a direct relation to the PageRank. They possess a higher potential to attract a user's attention as their location increases the attention economy attached to the site. With this location they can receive more traffic and their online marketplace will have more purchases. The PageRank of these sites allow them to be trusted and they are able to parlay this trust into increased business.


Other uses

The mathematics of PageRank are entirely general and apply to any graph or network in any domain. Thus, PageRank is now regularly used in bibliometrics, social and information network analysis, and for link prediction and recommendation. It is used for systems analysis of road networks, and in biology, chemistry, neuroscience, and physics.


Scientific research and academia

PageRank has been used to quantify the scientific impact of researchers. The underlying citation and collaboration networks are used in conjunction with pagerank algorithm in order to come up with a ranking system for individual publications which propagates to individual authors. The new index known as pagerank-index (Pi) is demonstrated to be fairer compared to h-index in the context of many drawbacks exhibited by h-index. For the analysis of protein networks in biology PageRank is also a useful tool. In any ecosystem, a modified version of PageRank may be used to determine species that are essential to the continuing health of the environment. A similar newer use of PageRank is to rank academic doctoral programs based on their records of placing their graduates in faculty positions. In PageRank terms, academic departments link to each other by hiring their faculty from each other (and from themselves). A version of PageRank has recently been proposed as a replacement for the traditional Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) impact factor, and implemented at
Eigenfactor The Eigenfactor score, developed by Jevin West and Carl Bergstrom at the University of Washington, is a rating of the total importance of a scientific journal. Journals are rated according to the number of incoming citations, with citations from h ...
as well as at SCImago. Instead of merely counting total citations to a journal, the "importance" of each citation is determined in a PageRank fashion. In neuroscience, the PageRank of a neuron in a neural network has been found to correlate with its relative firing rate.


Internet use

Personalized PageRank is used by Twitter to present users with other accounts they may wish to follow. Swiftype's site search product builds a "PageRank that's specific to individual websites" by looking at each website's signals of importance and prioritizing content based on factors such as number of links from the home page. A Web crawler may use PageRank as one of a number of importance metrics it uses to determine which URL to visit during a crawl of the web. One of the early working papers that were used in the creation of Google is ''Efficient crawling through URL ordering'', which discusses the use of a number of different importance metrics to determine how deeply, and how much of a site Google will crawl. PageRank is presented as one of a number of these importance metrics, though there are others listed such as the number of inbound and outbound links for a URL, and the distance from the root directory on a site to the URL. The PageRank may also be used as a methodology to measure the apparent impact of a community like the Blogosphere on the overall Web itself. This approach uses therefore the PageRank to measure the distribution of attention in reflection of the Scale-free network paradigm.


Other applications

In 2005, in a pilot study in Pakistan, ''Structural Deep Democracy, SD2'' was used for leadership selection in a sustainable agriculture group called Contact Youth. SD2 uses ''PageRank'' for the processing of the transitive proxy votes, with the additional constraints of mandating at least two initial proxies per voter, and all voters are proxy candidates. More complex variants can be built on top of SD2, such as adding specialist proxies and direct votes for specific issues, but SD2 as the underlying umbrella system, mandates that generalist proxies should always be used. In sport the PageRank algorithm has been used to rank the performance of: teams in the National Football League (NFL) in the USA; individual soccer players; and athletes in the Diamond League. PageRank has been used to rank spaces or streets to predict how many people (pedestrians or vehicles) come to the individual spaces or streets. In lexical semantics it has been used to perform
Word Sense Disambiguation Word-sense disambiguation (WSD) is the process of identifying which sense of a word is meant in a sentence or other segment of context. In human language processing and cognition, it is usually subconscious/automatic but can often come to consci ...
, Semantic similarity, and also to automatically rank WordNet
synsets In metadata, a synonym ring or synset, is a group of data elements that are considered semantically equivalent for the purposes of information retrieval. These data elements are frequently found in different metadata registries. Although a group ...
according to how strongly they possess a given semantic property, such as positivity or negativity.


nofollow

In early 2005, Google implemented a new value, " nofollow", for the rel attribute of HTML link and anchor elements, so that website developers and bloggers can make links that Google will not consider for the purposes of PageRank—they are links that no longer constitute a "vote" in the PageRank system. The nofollow relationship was added in an attempt to help combat
spamdexing Spamdexing (also known as search engine spam, search engine poisoning, black-hat search engine optimization, search spam or web spam) is the deliberate manipulation of search engine indexes. It involves a number of methods, such as link building ...
. As an example, people could previously create many message-board posts with links to their website to artificially inflate their PageRank. With the nofollow value, message-board administrators can modify their code to automatically insert "rel='nofollow'" to all hyperlinks in posts, thus preventing PageRank from being affected by those particular posts. This method of avoidance, however, also has various drawbacks, such as reducing the link value of legitimate comments. (See: Spam in blogs#nofollow) In an effort to manually control the flow of PageRank among pages within a website, many webmasters practice what is known as PageRank Sculpting—which is the act of strategically placing the nofollow attribute on certain internal links of a website in order to funnel PageRank towards those pages the webmaster deemed most important. This tactic had been used since the inception of the nofollow attribute, but may no longer be effective since Google announced that blocking PageRank transfer with nofollow does not redirect that PageRank to other links.


See also

* Attention inequality * CheiRank * Domain authority *
EigenTrust EigenTrust algorithm is a reputation management algorithm for peer-to-peer networks, developed by Sep Kamvar, Mario Schlosser, and Hector Garcia-Molina. The algorithm provides each peer in the network a unique global trust value based on the peer' ...
— a decentralized PageRank algorithm * Google bombing * Google Hummingbird * Google matrix * Google Panda * Google Penguin * Google Search * Hilltop algorithm *
Katz centrality In graph theory, the Katz centrality of a node is a measure of centrality in a network. It was introduced by Leo Katz in 1953 and is used to measure the relative degree of influence of an actor (or node) within a social network. Unlike typical ce ...
– a 1953 scheme closely related to pagerank * Link building * Search engine optimization *
SimRank SimRank is a general similarity measure, based on a simple and intuitive graph-theoretic model. SimRank is applicable in any domain with object-to-object relationships, that measures similarity of the structural context in which objects occur, ba ...
— a measure of object-to-object similarity based on random-surfer model * TrustRank * VisualRank - Google's application of PageRank to image-search * Webgraph


References


Citations


Sources

* * * * * * *


Relevant patents


Original PageRank U.S. Patent—Method for node ranking in a linked database
€”Patent number 6,285,999—September 4, 2001

€”Patent number 6,799,176—September 28, 2004 * [http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-adv.htm&r=1&p=1&f=G&l=50&d=PTXT&S1=7,058,628.PN.&OS=pn/7,058,628&RS=PN/7,058,628 PageRank U.S. Patent—Method for node ranking in a linked database]—Patent number 7,058,628—June 6, 2006
PageRank U.S. Patent—Scoring documents in a linked database
€”Patent number 7,269,587—September 11, 2007


External links



by Google
Our products and services
by Google

by the American Mathematical Society {{DEFAULTSORT:Pagerank Google Search Search engine optimization Reputation management Internet search algorithms American inventions Crowdsourcing Markov models Link analysis Articles with example MATLAB/Octave code Graph algorithms