538 research outputs found
FARS: Fuzzy Ant based Recommender System for Web Users
Recommender systems are useful tools which provide an
adaptive web environment for web users. Nowadays, having a
user friendly website is a big challenge in e-commerce
technology. In this paper, applying the benefits of both
collaborative and content based filtering techniques is proposed by presenting a fuzzy recommender system based on
collaborative behavior of ants (FARS). FARS works in two
phases: modeling and recommendation. First, userâs behaviors
are modeled offline and the results are used in second phase for online recommendation. Fuzzy techniques provide the possibility of capturing uncertainty among user interests and ant based algorithms provides us with optimal solutions. The performance of FARS is evaluated using log files of âInformation and Communication Technology Centerâ of Isfahan municipality in Iran and compared with ant based recommender system (ARS). The results shown are promising and proved that integrating fuzzy Ant approach provides us with more functional and robust recommendations
Musical recommendations and personalization in a social network
This paper presents a set of algorithms used for music recommendations and
personalization in a general purpose social network www.ok.ru, the second
largest social network in the CIS visited by more then 40 millions users per
day. In addition to classical recommendation features like "recommend a
sequence" and "find similar items" the paper describes novel algorithms for
construction of context aware recommendations, personalization of the service,
handling of the cold-start problem, and more. All algorithms described in the
paper are working on-line and are able to detect and address changes in the
user's behavior and needs in the real time.
The core component of the algorithms is a taste graph containing information
about different entities (users, tracks, artists, etc.) and relations between
them (for example, user A likes song B with certainty X, track B created by
artist C, artist C is similar to artist D with certainty Y and so on). Using
the graph it is possible to select tracks a user would most probably like, to
arrange them in a way that they match each other well, to estimate which items
from a fixed list are most relevant for the user, and more.
In addition, the paper describes the approach used to estimate algorithms
efficiency and analyze the impact of different recommendation related features
on the users' behavior and overall activity at the service.Comment: This is a full version of a 4 pages article published at ACM RecSys
201
The Semantics of Movie Metadata: Enhancing User Profiling for Hybrid Recommendation
In movie/TV collaborative recommendation approaches, ratings users gave to already visited content are often used as the only input to build profiles. However, users might have rated equally the same movie but due to different reasons: either because of its genre, the crew or the director. In such cases, this rating is insufficient to represent in detail usersâ preferences and it is wrong to conclude that they share similar tastes. The work presented in this paper tries to solve this ambiguity by exploiting hidden semantics in metadata elements. The influence of each of the standard description elements (actors, directors and genre) in representing userâs preferences is analyzed. Simulations were conducted using Movielens and Netflix datasets and different evaluation metrics were considered. The results demonstrate that the implemented approach yields significant advantages both in terms of improving performance, as well as in dealing with common limitations of standard collaborative algorithm.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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