10,547 research outputs found

    Leveraging tagging data for recommender systems

    Get PDF
    The goal of recommender systems is to provide personalized recommendations of products or services to users facing the problem of information overload on the Web. They provide personalized recommendations that best suit a customer's taste, preferences, and individual needs. Especially on large-scale Web sites where millions of items such as books or movies are offered to the users, recommender system technologies play an increasingly important role. One of their main advantages is that they reduce a user's decision-making effort. However, recommender systems are also of high importance from the service provider or system perspective. For instance, they can convince a customer to buy something or develop trust in the system as a whole which ensures customer loyalty and repeat sales gains. With the advent of the Social Web, user generated content has enriched the social dimension of the Web. New types of Web applications have emerged which emphasize content sharing and collaboration. These so-called Social Web platforms turned users from passive recipients of information into active and engaged contributors. As a result, the amount of user contributed information provided by the Social Web poses both new possibilities and challenges for recommender system research. This work deals with the question of how user-provided tagging data can be used to improve the quality of recommender systems. Tag-based recommendations and explanations are the two main areas of contribution in this work. The area of tag-based recommendations deals mainly with the topic of recommending items by exploiting tagging data. A tag recommender algorithm is proposed which can generate highly-accurate tag recommendations in real-time. Furthermore, the concept of user- and item-specific tag preferences is introduced in this work. By attaching feelings to tags users are provided a powerful means to express in detail which features of an item they particularly like or dislike. Additionally, new recommendation schemes are presented that can exploit tag preference data to improve recommendation accuracy. The area of tag-based explanations, on the other hand, deals with questions of how explanations for recommendations should be communicated to the user in the best possible way. New explanation methods based on personalized and non-personalized tag clouds are introduced. The personalized tag cloud interface makes use of the idea of user- and item-specific tag preferences. Furthermore, a first set of possible guidelines for designing or choosing an explanation interface for a recommender system is provided

    Lightweight Tag-Aware Personalized Recommendation on the Social Web Using Ontological Similarity

    Get PDF
    With the rapid growth of social tagging systems, many research efforts are being put intopersonalized search and recommendation using social tags (i.e., folksonomies). As users can freely choosetheir own vocabulary, social tags can be very ambiguous (for instance, due to the use of homonymsor synonyms). Machine learning techniques (such as clustering and deep neural networks) are usuallyapplied to overcome this tag ambiguity problem. However, the machine-learning-based solutions alwaysneed very powerful computing facilities to train recommendation models from a large amount of data,so they are inappropriate to be used in lightweight recommender systems. In this work, we propose anontological similarity to tackle the tag ambiguity problem without the need of model training by usingcontextual information. The novelty of this ontological similarity is that it first leverages external domainontologies to disambiguate tag information, and then semantically quantifies the relevance between userand item profiles according to the semantic similarity of the matching concepts of tags in the respectiveprofiles. Our experiments show that the proposed ontological similarity is semantically more accurate thanthe state-of-the-art similarity metrics, and can thus be applied to improve the performance of content-based tag-aware personalized recommendation on the Social Web. Consequently, as a model-training-freesolution, ontological similarity is a good disambiguation choice for lightweight recommender systems anda complement to machine-learning-based recommendation solutions.Fil: Xu, Zhenghua. University of Oxford; Reino UnidoFil: Tifrea-Marciuska, Oana. Bloomberg; Reino UnidoFil: Lukasiewicz, Thomas. University of Oxford; Reino UnidoFil: Martinez, Maria Vanina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Bahía Blanca. Instituto de Ciencias e Ingeniería de la Computación. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Ciencias e Ingeniería de la Computación. Instituto de Ciencias e Ingeniería de la Computación; ArgentinaFil: Simari, Gerardo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Bahía Blanca. Instituto de Ciencias e Ingeniería de la Computación. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Ciencias e Ingeniería de la Computación. Instituto de Ciencias e Ingeniería de la Computación; ArgentinaFil: Chen, Cheng. China Academy of Electronics and Information Technology; Chin

    Tag-Aware Recommender Systems: A State-of-the-art Survey

    Get PDF
    In the past decade, Social Tagging Systems have attracted increasing attention from both physical and computer science communities. Besides the underlying structure and dynamics of tagging systems, many efforts have been addressed to unify tagging information to reveal user behaviors and preferences, extract the latent semantic relations among items, make recommendations, and so on. Specifically, this article summarizes recent progress about tag-aware recommender systems, emphasizing on the contributions from three mainstream perspectives and approaches: network-based methods, tensor-based methods, and the topic-based methods. Finally, we outline some other tag-related works and future challenges of tag-aware recommendation algorithms.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figure

    The state-of-the-art in personalized recommender systems for social networking

    Get PDF
    With the explosion of Web 2.0 application such as blogs, social and professional networks, and various other types of social media, the rich online information and various new sources of knowledge flood users and hence pose a great challenge in terms of information overload. It is critical to use intelligent agent software systems to assist users in finding the right information from an abundance of Web data. Recommender systems can help users deal with information overload problem efficiently by suggesting items (e.g., information and products) that match users’ personal interests. The recommender technology has been successfully employed in many applications such as recommending films, music, books, etc. The purpose of this report is to give an overview of existing technologies for building personalized recommender systems in social networking environment, to propose a research direction for addressing user profiling and cold start problems by exploiting user-generated content newly available in Web 2.0

    Semantic Grounding Strategies for Tagbased Recommender Systems

    Full text link
    Recommender systems usually operate on similarities between recommended items or users. Tag based recommender systems utilize similarities on tags. The tags are however mostly free user entered phrases. Therefore, similarities computed without their semantic groundings might lead to less relevant recommendations. In this paper, we study a semantic grounding used for tag similarity calculus. We show a comprehensive analysis of semantic grounding given by 20 ontologies from different domains. The study besides other things reveals that currently available OWL ontologies are very narrow and the percentage of the similarity expansions is rather small. WordNet scores slightly better as it is broader but not much as it does not support several semantic relationships. Furthermore, the study reveals that even with such number of expansions, the recommendations change considerably.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
    corecore