Unfortunately WMF policy to release search queries to the public is too strict. (Although there are privacy concerns, I'm sure anyone here could easily think of some simple whitelist rules. For more details please refer to https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T115085 or https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T8373 or similar bugs in phabricator)
As a workaround you can use other data as approximation to what users look for (though you don't get the query itself, only the result - under assumption the users find what they look for): https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/ - page view data or as dump: https://dumps.wikimedia.org/other/analytics/
Other options (they have their own caveats but you can try): * Search for "Special:Search/QUERY" in the pagecounts-all-sites linked above (zcat DUMP | grep "Search/") - this can provide you results such as "commons.m.m Special:Search/Jnnjjjnnnnjnjjnbnjbnjnjj 1 5418" so you know 1 user seared for "Jnnjjjnnnnjnjjnbnjbnjnjj" in mobile, at 2016-05-15 13:00-14:00 * Use google trends
On Wed, Aug 17, 2016 at 8:18 PM, Stas Malyshev smalyshev@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hi!
I’m currently writing by bachelor thesis at University Koblenz, Germany. The goal is to improve Wikipedia search by exploiting the text structure of Wikipedia articles. To conduct unbiased user studies I need real world queries so I can compare the novel algorithms agains the currently used ones. Are there any query logs existing which I can use for this purpose?
We do have query logs, but they are not publicly accessible for privacy reasons. You may want to check this out though: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Understanding_Wikidata_Queries
-- Stas Malyshev smalyshev@wikimedia.org
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