Life during the coronavirus pandemic is full of questions.
And for many of those questions, people are turning to the internet and, by extension, to Google. Google is by far the worlds dominant search engine, fielding about 90 percent of the worlds online queries. So Google has more insight into our internet searches than any other company.
Fortunately for the data nerds among us, the company makes those search trends readily available with a website called Google Trends. This tool lets people compare how popular one search is over time or compared with another, offering insight into what people are curious about. Thats particularly helpful with the coronavirus, which has consistently dominated search queries in the past few months even beyond more quotidian standbys like weather, music, and video.
We spoke with Simon Rogers, data editor at Google, who has been putting out a fascinating daily newsletter and coronavirus page from Google Trends data about different trending searches and what they might mean.
This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.
For those who arent familiar, can you explain what Google Trends is?
Google Trends is basically a public tool that anybody can use. It takes a sample of all search there are billions of searches every day, so it couldnt possibly measure every one and basically all of those searches go through this process where we try and work out what theyre really about, which topics theyre about. And then what we do is try and make that data easier for people to access.
So around something like coronavirus, say, thatll be where we would look at the top questions that somebody will be asking about the virus. Google Trends is, I would say, the worlds largest free-access, journalistic data set. And its ever-changing, and every day it gives you a sense of what people really care about.
What advantage does Google Trends have over other datasets?
Theres ubiquity in search. It takes you beyond that echo chamber of social media. Because youre not presenting yourself in a certain way, youre being honest. Youre never as honest as you are with your search engine. You get a sense of what people genuinely care about and genuinely want to know and not just how theyre presenting themselves to the rest of the world. And its immediate. As soon as something happens, it shows up in search.
Ive been paying attention to Google Trends a lot more during coronavirus. Thats because, as were spending more time at home and computers mediate our lives with the outside world even more, it seems like were getting a better window into what peoples thoughts and questions and fears are during the pandemic. Do you think thats the case?
I think partly its because suddenly youve got this giant shared experience, something were all going through, and its very easy in that environment to feel isolated. Whats happened to you isnt happening to anybody else. But you can get a real sense of how thats reflected in the way that we search. Looking at the searches, right now, I think they almost split into two different categories.
On one side, there are people searching for the big issues around the virus: Is there a vaccine yet? or Why does one drug work? or What are the symptoms? those kinds of big questions. And then the other side is the fallout from the virus, which are searches around things like loneliness and big emotional issues. And then there are also things like: How do I cut my own hair? or How do I bake bread? or How do I keep the kids entertained? things were all going through.
Those latter trends have been some of the most interesting to me. I saw the bread, obviously, banana bread I figure people are just buying way too many bananas and have to figure out how to deal with it how to cut your own hair. One of the things that really blew me away was that all of a sudden everyone and their mother was Googling how to make coffee and must have never had to figure that out before. What do you make of that?
Its funny, isnt it? Its all those things that we do during the day, not at home often. I think its partly because people want to expand their knowledge of something. So probably people know how to make instant coffee by now, right? But people will search for how to make Dalgona coffee, which is this kind of whipped thing with sugar in it that my daughters been doing tons of in the last five weeks. Its things like that which are out of the ordinary, so theyre not necessarily things you would do if you didnt have time at home and you werent thinking of how to just change things up a little bit.
What are some of the more surprising searches youve seen trending?
The fact that there were things Ive been thinking of personally to see them show up in search is always interesting. Like we have a 3D printer, and I was thinking, I wonder if other people search for how to 3D print face masks to donate to hospitals, which is a very specific thing. Searches for 3D printing are higher than ever before in history. And theres some things which are kind of reassuring, like searches for how to help, food donation, helping the community, how to volunteer all of those things are higher than ever before.
Its good to think that were thinking of others at this moment. But theres big spikes in searches around very specific DIY that goes across both search data and YouTube data. And theres a lot of big spikes in search for things that are homemade, weird stuff that I wouldnt even think about, like homemade eyebrow wax, that makes sense but also scares me a little bit.
I could use some homemade eyebrow wax right about now.
Ha! Then, theres more the how-to thing, like how to make a face mask at home or how to ripen avocados, how to divide fractions. We saw searches for shredded were spiking and we thought, Oh, this is people talking about weightlifting or bodybuilding, and actually its people searching for shredded chicken.
What about the weirdest search?
Theres things that would have seemed weird like six weeks ago that dont seem weird now. Drive-by birthday party spiked 5,000 percent, and thats not something I or anybody had ever heard of before six weeks ago. And if youd asked me this in March, Id say well, this is a weird thing, but now it just feels normal.
Its the new normal. What about concerning Google searches? For example, this morning I saw that one of the highest-trending US coronavirus questions was, Who created coronavirus? which is this conspiracy theory that keeps popping up and has no basis in fact.
There are things that are concerning for society like the spike in searches for loneliness, people searching for having trouble sleeping, depression. All of those things are concerning to me, and I worry for people that dont have people with them or are feeling it. Then the other misinformation thing is really interesting, because normally around any political thing, you always see spikes and searches where people are trying to find out if a misinfo story is true.
But now, I do get the sense that the highest spikes are things around searches for reliable information, like people searching for cdc.gov or wherever are really high at the moment. So I wonder whether thats because were looking for things we know are true. Occasionally, misinfo things do show up. But if you have politicians saying, Coronavirus was created somewhere, then people are going to search for that. And thats just a side effect of where we are right now. I think the fact that people are looking for it is actually a good thing because it means we want to know if its true or not. Theyre not necessarily just going to accept it.
Is there any real-world stuff that you could do with Google Trends, especially as it relates to public health. Like, could you see where there are new coronavirus hot spots or something like that?
The country-level datasets, which we update every day, shows the top 100 places searching for coronavirus as well as the top related queries, which are what people type in when they search for the virus. Governments have noticed different stages for different things that are popping up in search and then change their official information to reflect that. I think were really at the beginning of how useful this is.
One of the things weve been thinking about are these kind of patterns of search around the virus. What you see is when people dont really have many cases, lots of searches are very informational like, What is coronavirus? And then when cases start happening then there are things like, What are the symptoms of coronavirus? And then it gets to more sophisticated questions when youre living in lockdown.
Like in New York, for instance, youll see questions around things like, How long does coronavirus live on surfaces? or Whens the lockdown going to end? or How do I get my stimulus check? So you can really see how things change over time. I think you could probably build a really interesting model around that. This is a real-time reaction to the situation around people.
Are there any regional or country-specific differences in coronavirus that have stuck out to you?
There are some differences. For instance, in France right now they have these zones of infection, so people search for the red zone, and before that was people searching for a pass to leave Paris and things like that. You see these kinds of country differences, but really the way that the search evolves is common across countries.
So if you were to look at the searches in, say, Milan seven weeks ago, they are very similar to searches were seeing in New York now. Its almost like the big questions are common across all of us. Were all trying to find the same things. It comes out of the uncertainty of knowing there isnt a cure, there isnt a vaccine right now. That uncertainty leads to a lot of similar questions in different places.
What dont we see in Google Trends data?
We cant tell demographics. I dont know who somebody is. The data is anonymized so you dont get individual data. So, I cant tell you how different age groups search or anything like that. Also, unless youre extrapolating something from the data, what you can tell is what people care about, but you cant tell what their opinions are about it.
What should people not be Googling?
I wouldnt tell anybody not to Google anything, because thats such a personal thing. I think people need to think about information with the same care they think about any aspect of their lives. If youre consuming information, you want it to be reliable. Just thinking of information as this valuable resource that matters is really important.
I think Id rather have people Googling everything, searching for everything, rather than accepting something without searching for it. Id much rather you looked up stuff yourself than just believe things on face value, wherever theyre coming from.
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Google Trends: What searches tell us about our coronavirus thoughts and fears - Vox.com
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