Seeing a specific number like "109" (as opposed to "100+" or "Many") builds system transparency. It suggests a finite, indexed universe of information.
When a system presents 109 resources, the efficiency of the becomes paramount.
Below is a structured paper exploring the significance of this specific quantified feedback in digital systems. We found 109 resources for you..
In standard web design (often 10–25 results per page), 109 resources require the user to navigate through 5 to 11 pages. This creates a "scrolling fatigue" barrier where the user must decide if the effort to find the "perfect" resource outweighs the utility of the first few results. 3. Psychological Impact: The Paradox of Choice
In modern digital interfaces, the notification "We found [X] resources for you" serves as a bridge between algorithmic processing and human expectation. This paper examines the specific instance of finding 109 resources, exploring how this "middle-ground" volume affects user cognitive load, trust in system precision, and search strategy. 1. Introduction Seeing a specific number like "109" (as opposed
If a user searches a broad term and receives 109 results, the system is demonstrating high precision.
The burden shifts to the algorithm to ensure that the "1st of 109" is significantly more relevant than the "109th," as users rarely progress past the second page of results. 5. Conclusion Below is a structured paper exploring the significance
The UX of Abundance: Analyzing the Impact of Quantified Search Results in Information Retrieval
Seeing a specific number like "109" (as opposed to "100+" or "Many") builds system transparency. It suggests a finite, indexed universe of information.
When a system presents 109 resources, the efficiency of the becomes paramount.
Below is a structured paper exploring the significance of this specific quantified feedback in digital systems.
In standard web design (often 10–25 results per page), 109 resources require the user to navigate through 5 to 11 pages. This creates a "scrolling fatigue" barrier where the user must decide if the effort to find the "perfect" resource outweighs the utility of the first few results. 3. Psychological Impact: The Paradox of Choice
In modern digital interfaces, the notification "We found [X] resources for you" serves as a bridge between algorithmic processing and human expectation. This paper examines the specific instance of finding 109 resources, exploring how this "middle-ground" volume affects user cognitive load, trust in system precision, and search strategy. 1. Introduction
If a user searches a broad term and receives 109 results, the system is demonstrating high precision.
The burden shifts to the algorithm to ensure that the "1st of 109" is significantly more relevant than the "109th," as users rarely progress past the second page of results. 5. Conclusion
The UX of Abundance: Analyzing the Impact of Quantified Search Results in Information Retrieval