I actively hunt for citations to my publications
(broadly construed—counting citations to my blog posts, etc). I frequently
search on “Seth Barrett Tillman” and a list of items will be returned. I have
noticed that if I search on “Seth Barrett Tillman” AND “string”, I will get a
second list. I would have thought that by using an “AND”, the second list would
be a subset of the first list. But it is not. The second list will sometimes
contain items not in the first list, even though “Seth Barrett Tillman” is in
the search query for both lists. Why isn’t the second list a subset of the
first list?
This leaves me wondering if there are
other citations out there that I have not discovered because I don’t know what
string to use as a second string. Is there some way to tell Google to find all “Seth
Barrett Tillman” items without regard to a well-chosen second string and
thereby uncover all “hidden” citations?
For example, if you search on
“seth barrett tillman” AND “McCutcheon
v. Federal”
you will see that the last returned
item is:
But if you just search on “seth
barrett tillman”,
you don’t get that item. It is a bona
fide citation in a Japanese law journal. Why does Google do this?
Seth
Seth Barrett Tillman, Why Does Google Do This?, New Reform Club (Oct. 30, 2019, 7:23 AM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2019/10/why-does-google-do-this.html>.