Has Donald Trump’s campaign reached a turning point? There’s one metric for gauging public interest that now points to yes.

Search traffic on Google for Trump’s name has fallen drastically since it peaked on Super Tuesday, according to data from Google Trends. The most recent numbers show “Donald Trump” searches are down 75% from his best day in March.

To be sure, interest in Trump, as measured by Google, is still greater than that enjoyed by any of the other candidates. His name typically garners at least twice as many searches as each of his rivals. In recent months, Google searches for his name have surged around primary election days. They also typically spiked when Trump made comments that drew public outcry, including his recent comments about the legal ramifications he would associate with abortion.

See:Trump on abortion rights: ‘The laws are set,’ and ‘we have to leave it that way’

But in the past two weeks, the number of people Googling his name didn’t increase nearly as much as the number of articles mentioning him, according to data from news aggregator Factiva.

Indeed, we seem to be back to where we were in January, when the number of stories mentioning Trump was disproportionately larger than his prevalence on Google. Then, and now, a common criticism is that the media’s obsession with Trump created momentum for his campaign, rather than the other way around.

Biting at Trump’s heels, on Google anyway, is Bernie Sanders. Searches for Sanders are also down from their peak in February, but have generally held steady in the past month.

In contrast to Trump, the number of news stories about Sanders has been disproportionately smaller than interest in him on Google, particularly since his late March primary victories in Alaska and Washington.