Definition
The definition of "session" varies, particularly when applied to search engines. Generally, a session is understood to consist of "a sequence of requests made by a single end-user during a visit to a particular site". In the context of search engines, "sessions" and "query sessions" have at least two definitions. A session or query session may be all queries made by a user in a particular time period or it may also be a series of queries or navigations with a consistent underlying user need.Uses
Sessions per user can be used as a measurement of website usage. Other metrics used within research and applied web analytics include session length, and user actions per session. Session length is seen as a more accurate alternative to measuring page views. Reconstructed sessions have also been used to measure total user input, including to measure the number of labour hours taken to construct Wikipedia. Sessions are also used for operational analytics, data anonymization, identifying networking anomalies, and synthetic workload generation for testing servers with artificial traffic.Session reconstruction
Time-oriented approaches
Time-oriented approaches to session reconstruction look for a set period of user inactivity commonly called an "inactivity threshold." Once this period of inactivity is reached, the user is assumed to have left the site or stopped using the browser entirely and the session is ended. Further requests from the same user are considered a second session. A common value for the inactivity threshold is 30 minutes and sometimes described as the industry standard. Some have argued that a threshold of 30 minutes produces artifacts around naturally long sessions and have experimented with other thresholds. Others simply state: "no time threshold is effective at identifying essions. One alternative that has been proposed is using user-specific thresholds rather than a single, global threshold for the entire dataset. This has the problem of assuming that the thresholds follow a bimodal distribution, and is not suitable for datasets that cover a long period of time.Navigation-oriented approaches
Navigation-oriented approaches exploit the structure of websites - specifically, the presence ofReferences
Bibliography
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *{{cite book, last1=Weischdel, first1=Birgit, last2=Huizingh, first2=Eelko K. R. E., date=2006, title=Website optimization with web metrics: a case study, journal=Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Electronic Commerce, pages=463, url=http://aaa.volospin.com/BT606B/Website_Optimization_p463-weischedel.pdf, doi=10.1145/1151454.1151525, isbn=978-1595933928, s2cid=2965255 Business intelligence Big data Web analytics Digital marketing