Google Programmable Search Engine

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Google Co-op logo
Google Co-op logo

Google Co-op is a service provided by Google which allows experts to create a list of sites about a particular topic and users to subscribe to these lists. When a user subscribes to links and labels provided by a Google Co-op contributor this information is incorporated into that user's web search results when they search for a related topic.

Google launched the service on May 10, 2006.

Google Health

Health is a featured topic in the Google Co-op system. Like all other topics, it is triggered by users entering specific queries, in this case, health queries.

When a user searches for medical information, a number of options become available at the top of the Search Engine Results Page.

The idea of co-ops for a decentralized labelling/quality management system is very similar or idential to a labelling system proposed in 1998 by Gunther Eysenbach in the British Medical Journal[1], later called MedCIRCLE [2].

Co-op contributors to Google Health include the National Library of Medicine, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Health on the Net, Harvard Medical School, Mayo Clinic and others. The list also includes Enoch Choi as an individual contributor. Enoch has outlined some of the details on how he contributes sites on his weblog.

According to ZDNet, Google Health is under the leadership of Adam Bosworth, former VP of Engineering at BEA Systems.

References

  1. NMM blog post about Google Health (with permission)

Notes