Google trending the webosphere – comparison of volume of “Paris Hilton” vs “Britney Spears” vs “Climate Change” searches.

…Which is kind of sad really. Here is what it looks like. The axes imply relative number of searches since it doesn’t seem like you get hard numbers on this (from Google Trends).

googletrends.jpg

What’s kind of interesting is that you can kind of see (for Britney and Paris, anyway) where the major news events occurred. In Britney’s case, there are two large peeks which actually correspond to her head shaving and some bad performance at an awards show. I’ll leave it up to you to figure out what the Paris peaks are, but I would guess it has something to do with her going to jail.

At this scale, it doesn’t seem like you can pick up hose sorts of trends on the term “climate change.”


If we do expand the scale so that you can see the peaks for climate change, this is what you get:

googltrends2.jpg

It would be interesting to see if web interest is maybe dictated by seasonal events (like certain weather examples). I do note, however, that the announcement of Al Gore and IPCC getting the Nobel Peace Prize (Oct) didn’t seem to do much here. On the other hand, February was when the Working Group I of the IPCC released their science report (the one that really emphasized anthropogenic effects) – although from the graph, it looks like something happening in January sort of set things off.

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David (@ng_dave) is Faculty at the Michael Smith Labs. His writing has appeared in places such as McSweeney's, The Walrus, and boingboing.net. He plans on using Terry as another place to highlight the mostly science-y links he appreciates. In fact, if you liked this one, you might also like his main site generally - this can be found at popperfont.net.