AI Session Search makes it easy to find specific session replays in Noibu using natural language queries with a guided filter interface. It streamlines the way teams discover replays of user sessions to gain more context on errors and user-reported problems.
Note: this feature is currently in beta, which means it’s still in development as we test and evaluate. Functionality of beta features may be limited and may change without notice. |
Creating Search Queries
From the Sessions page in Noibu, click the Session search (Beta) tab to explore the AI search capabilities.
You can build a search query by typing in the search bar using natural language (e.g., “sessions from yesterday with rage clicks”), or clicking on filter pills below the search bar.
Each pill corresponds to a filter. Clicking a pill reveals predefined options to choose from, allowing you to build a targeted query in just a few clicks.
The following filters are available by clicking on the relevant pill:
- Browser
- Clicked On
- Custom Attribute
- Date and Time
- Error Count
- Funnel Step
- Help Code
- IP Address
- Issue ID
- Operating System
- Page Count
- Performance
- Core Web Vitals
- Symptom
- URL
Combine multiple pills, or type in the search box to refine your search query. For example, selecting "Occurred In the last 4 hours" and "Symptom Is Rage Click" will find sessions that occurred within the last 4 hours and involved rage clicks.
After setting the desired filters, click the purple arrow to execute the search. Noibu’s AI engine will take a few moments to retrieve the most relevant sessions based on your query.
Review and Refine Search Results
Noibu will return the most relevant session replays in a list. Click any of the listed sessions to view the session playback in the right-hand panel.
Click the Good or Poor buttons below the search results to help our AI become more accurate over time.
Below the relevant sessions is another search bar, which allows you to add follow-up queries to refine your search using natural language.
For example, “Only sessions on the checkout stage” could narrow the list of sessions to only those that involved the checkout funnel stage. This ability to change and refine your query helps zero in on high-priority user experience issues more efficiently.