Warning: Altis v9 is no longer supported.

Date Decay

The ordering of the results of an Elasticsearch query is done by comparing the weighting score for each post. This score is calculated as a base score:

 [ best exact match relevance ] + [ best fuzzy match relevance ]

... modified by a decay function score representing the staleness of the post.

ElasticPress's default settings are to use a function which returns a float from 0-1, where 1 represents a post updated in the past week, and the score approaches zero quite rapidly - a post published two months ago will be around .15).

The default setting for "boost mode" - how the decay function is used to modify the base score - is "sum", meaning that this 0-1 value is added to the base score. Since the base scores for exact matches of moderately common search terms (ie terms that appear in 2-3% of posts on a site) can be in the realm of 100-150, adding this decay score has very little impact beyond guaranteeing a consistant order for posts with otherwise identical relevance scores.

For sites that want to prioritize timeliness of results for search queries, using a "boost mode" of "multiply" may be desirable, so that recency of content has a higher impact on search results. Using this, the decay score is a fractional multiplier which ensures that more recent results are prioritized.

(If you want to go deeper into the equations under the hood, the Elasticsearch documentation about supported decay functions is a good place to dig in.)

Altis Enhanced Search allows for overriding these default values by specifying the values you want to use in the composer.json config object:

{
    "extra": {
        "altis": {
            "modules": {
                "search": {
                    "date-decay": {
                        "offset": "30d",
                        "scale": "30d",
                        "decay": 0.9,
                        "boost_mode": "multiply"
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

This configuration creates a date decay algorithm where posts from the past 30 days ("offset") are considered equally current, and for every 30 days in the past ("scale") posts are considered to lose 10% of their relevancy ("decay"). A post from a year ago is weighted about 30% as highly (0.9^12 = .2824) as one from the past week.

A useful correlation by which to understand this score is that exact matches are about 4x more impactful on a post's score as fuzzy matches. Deciding at what age a post which exactly matches the search terms presented is stale enough that it should not outweigh a current post in search results can help to derive the values to use for the decay function.