Title
Shared User Behavior on the World Wide Web
Abstract
Abstract: Studying accesses to Web servers from different user communities,helps identify similarities and differences in user access patterns. In this paper we identify invariants that hold across a collection of ten traces representing traffic seen by proxy servers. The traces were collected from university, high school, governmental, industry, and online service provider environments, with request rates that range from a few accesses to thousands of accesses per hour. In most of the workloads,a small portion of the clients are responsible for most of the accesses. In addition most of the accesses go to a small set of servers. By doing a longitudinal study on the collected data we noticed that the identified invariants do not change over a year period. However, the percentage of script generated documents, is increasing.
Year
Venue
Keywords
1997
WebNet
world wide web,service provider
Field
DocType
Citations 
Web design,Web Accessibility Initiative,World Wide Web,Web page,Web standards,Web 2.0,Web navigation,Web service,Multimedia,Web server,Business
Conference
13
PageRank 
References 
Authors
12.36
3
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Ghaleb Abdulla1519150.23
Edward A. Fox23966921.62
Marc Abrams3549153.19