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Fusion 5.12
    Fusion 5.12

    Experiments APIManaged Fusion Query APIs

    Table of Contents

    Use the Experiments API to compare different configuration variants and determine which ones are most successful. For example, configure different variants that use different query pipelines, and then analyze and compare search activity to see which variant best meets your goals.

    Experiments let you evaluate multiple variants which can differ from each other by pipeline, collection, search handler, request parameters, or some combination of those. An experiment uses one or more metrics to measure the performance of each variant, so they can be compared quantitatively.

    Experiments are also available through the Experiments UI in the Managed Fusion UI.

    For more information, view the API specification.

    Experiment types

    The Experiments API supports A/B (or A/B/n) tests.

    A/B testing

    The Experiments API in Managed Fusion lets you set up straightforward A/B (or A/B/n) tests. An A/B test is a two-sample hypothesis test with two variants. In A/B/n testing, variant A (the first variant that is defined) is compared with B, and with each of the other variants. For example, with an A/B/C/D test, the comparisons are A/B, A/C, and A/D.

    The simplest setup is to create just two variants (A and B). Variant A is customarily considered the “control” configuration, and variant B is the test configuration or “treatment” to compare with the control configuration.

    It is also common to perform A/A testing, that is, to create a separate variant with exactly the same configuration as the control. A/A testing is useful for detecting any systemic errors.

    You can perform both A/B and A/A testing as a part of the same experiment. To do this, create three variants: one variant that is the control (A1), a second variant with the same configuration as the control (A2), and a third variant with the treatment configuration (B). The comparisons are A1/A2 and A1/B.

    For example, the following experiment definition creates an experiment with 3 variants. The first two are identical, while the third uses a different query pipeline, called with-recommendations:

    {
        "id": "sample-experiment",
        "uniqueIdParameter": "userId",
        "baseSignalsCollection": "bestbuy",
        "variants": [
            {
                "name": "control-a1"
            },
            {
                "name": "control-a2",
            },
            {
                "name": "b",
                "queryPipeline": "with-recommendations",
            }
        ],
        "enabled": true,
        "metrics": [
            {
                "type": "ctr",
                "name": "CTR",
                "primary": true
            },
            {
                "type": "conversion-rate",
                "name": "purchase rate",
                "signalType": "purchase",
            }
        ]
    }

    As users interact with this experiment, we expect the results of metrics for the first two variants to be quite similar, since they are configured identically. With a small sample size, metrics could vary somewhat based on random chance but, as more users interact with the experiment, we expect the metrics to converge on identical results. The third variant, however, will likely perform differently, and its performance will tell us whether we should be using the with-recommendations pipeline for all search traffic.