6,448 research outputs found

    Combining Content with User Preferences for TED Lecture Recommendation

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    This paper introduces a new dataset and compares several methods for the recommendation of non-fiction audio-visual material, namely lectures from the TED website. The TED dataset contains 1,149 talks and 69,023 user profiles, who have made more than 100,000 ratings and 200,000 comments. This data set, which we make public, can be used for training and testing applied for generic or personalized recommendation tasks. We define content-based, collaborative, and combined recommendation methods for TED lectures and use cross-validation to select the best parameters of keyword-based (TFIDF) and semantic vector space-based methods (LSI, LDA, RP, and ESA). We compare these methods on the personalized recommendation task in two settings, a cold-start and a non-cold-start one. In the former, semantic-based vector spaces perform better than keyword-based ones. In the latter, where collaborative information can be exploited, content-based methods are outperformed by collaborative filtering ones, but the proposed combined method shows acceptable performances, and can be used in both settings

    Combining Content with User Preferences for Non-Fiction Multimedia Recommendation: A Study on TED Lectures

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    This paper introduces a new dataset and compares several methods for the recommendation of non-fiction audio visual material, namely lectures from the TED website. The TED dataset contains 1,149 talks and 69,023 profiles of users, who have made more than 100,000 ratings and 200,000 comments. The corresponding metadata, which we make available, can be used for training and testing generic or personalized recommender systems. We define content-based, collaborative, and methods (LSI, LDA, RP, and ESA). We compare these methods on a personalized recommendation task in two settings, a cold-start and a non-cold-start one. In the cold-start setting, semantic vector spaces perform better than keywords. In the non-cold-start setting, where collaborative information can be exploited, content-based methods are outperformed by collaborative filtering ones, but the proposed combined method shows acceptable performances, and can be used in both settings. For the generic recommendation task, LSI and RP again outperform TF-IDF

    Current Challenges and Visions in Music Recommender Systems Research

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    Music recommender systems (MRS) have experienced a boom in recent years, thanks to the emergence and success of online streaming services, which nowadays make available almost all music in the world at the user's fingertip. While today's MRS considerably help users to find interesting music in these huge catalogs, MRS research is still facing substantial challenges. In particular when it comes to build, incorporate, and evaluate recommendation strategies that integrate information beyond simple user--item interactions or content-based descriptors, but dig deep into the very essence of listener needs, preferences, and intentions, MRS research becomes a big endeavor and related publications quite sparse. The purpose of this trends and survey article is twofold. We first identify and shed light on what we believe are the most pressing challenges MRS research is facing, from both academic and industry perspectives. We review the state of the art towards solving these challenges and discuss its limitations. Second, we detail possible future directions and visions we contemplate for the further evolution of the field. The article should therefore serve two purposes: giving the interested reader an overview of current challenges in MRS research and providing guidance for young researchers by identifying interesting, yet under-researched, directions in the field

    Assessing and improving recommender systems to deal with user cold-start problem

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    Recommender systems are in our everyday life. The recommendation methods have as main purpose to predict preferences for new items based on userŠs past preferences. The research related to this topic seeks among other things to discuss user cold-start problem, which is the challenge of recommending to users with few or no preferences records. One way to address cold-start issues is to infer the missing data relying on side information. Side information of different types has been explored in researches. Some studies use social information combined with usersŠ preferences, others user click behavior, location-based information, userŠs visual perception, contextual information, etc. The typical approach is to use side information to build one prediction model for each cold user. Due to the inherent complexity of this prediction process, for full cold-start user in particular, the performance of most recommender systems falls a great deal. We, rather, propose that cold users are best served by models already built in system. In this thesis we propose 4 approaches to deal with user cold-start problem using existing models available for analysis in the recommender systems. We cover the follow aspects: o Embedding social information into traditional recommender systems: We investigate the role of several social metrics on pairwise preference recommendations and provide the Ąrst steps towards a general framework to incorporate social information in traditional approaches. o Improving recommendation with visual perception similarities: We extract networks connecting users with similar visual perception and use them to come up with prediction models that maximize the information gained from cold users. o Analyzing the beneĄts of general framework to incorporate networked information into recommender systems: Representing different types of side information as a user network, we investigated how to incorporate networked information into recommender systems to understand the beneĄts of it in the context of cold user recommendation. o Analyzing the impact of prediction model selection for cold users: The last proposal consider that without side information the system will recommend to cold users based on the switch of models already built in system. We evaluated the proposed approaches in terms of prediction quality and ranking quality in real-world datasets under different recommendation domains. The experiments showed that our approaches achieve better results than the comparison methods.Tese (Doutorado)Sistemas de recomendação fazem parte do nosso dia-a-dia. Os métodos usados nesses sistemas tem como objetivo principal predizer as preferências por novos itens baseado no perĄl do usuário. As pesquisas relacionadas a esse tópico procuram entre outras coisas tratar o problema do cold-start do usuário, que é o desaĄo de recomendar itens para usuários que possuem poucos ou nenhum registro de preferências no sistema. Uma forma de tratar o cold-start do usuário é buscar inferir as preferências dos usuários a partir de informações adicionais. Dessa forma, informações adicionais de diferentes tipos podem ser exploradas nas pesquisas. Alguns estudos usam informação social combinada com preferências dos usuários, outros se baseiam nos clicks ao navegar por sites Web, informação de localização geográĄca, percepção visual, informação de contexto, etc. A abordagem típica desses sistemas é usar informação adicional para construir um modelo de predição para cada usuário. Além desse processo ser mais complexo, para usuários full cold-start (sem preferências identiĄcadas pelo sistema) em particular, a maioria dos sistemas de recomendação apresentam um baixo desempenho. O trabalho aqui apresentado, por outro lado, propõe que novos usuários receberão recomendações mais acuradas de modelos de predição que já existem no sistema. Nesta tese foram propostas 4 abordagens para lidar com o problema de cold-start do usuário usando modelos existentes nos sistemas de recomendação. As abordagens apresentadas trataram os seguintes aspectos: o Inclusão de informação social em sistemas de recomendação tradicional: foram investigados os papéis de várias métricas sociais em um sistema de recomendação de preferências pairwise fornecendo subsidíos para a deĄnição de um framework geral para incluir informação social em abordagens tradicionais. o Uso de similaridade por percepção visual: usando a similaridade por percepção visual foram inferidas redes, conectando usuários similares, para serem usadas na seleção de modelos de predição para novos usuários. o Análise dos benefícios de um framework geral para incluir informação de redes de usuários em sistemas de recomendação: representando diferentes tipos de informação adicional como uma rede de usuários, foi investigado como as redes de usuários podem ser incluídas nos sistemas de recomendação de maneira a beneĄciar a recomendação para usuários cold-start. o Análise do impacto da seleção de modelos de predição para usuários cold-start: a última abordagem proposta considerou que sem a informação adicional o sistema poderia recomendar para novos usuários fazendo a troca entre os modelos já existentes no sistema e procurando aprender qual seria o mais adequado para a recomendação. As abordagens propostas foram avaliadas em termos da qualidade da predição e da qualidade do ranking em banco de dados reais e de diferentes domínios. Os resultados obtidos demonstraram que as abordagens propostas atingiram melhores resultados que os métodos do estado da arte

    Learning Explainable User Sentiment and Preferences for Information Filtering

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    In the last decade, online social networks have enabled people to interact in many ways with each other and with content. The digital traces of such actions reveal people's preferences towards online content such as news or products. These traces often result from interactions such as sharing or liking, but also from interactions in natural language. The continuous growth of the amount of content and of digital traces has led to information overload: surrounded by large volumes of information, people are facing difficulties when searching for information relevant to their interests. To improve user experience, information systems must be able to assist users in achieving their search goals, effectively and efficiently. This thesis is concerned with two important challenges that information systems need to address in order to significantly improve search experience and overcome information overload. First, these systems need to model accurately the variety of user traces, and second, they need to meaningfully explain search results and recommendations to users. To address these challenges, this thesis proposes novel methods based on machine learning to model user sentiment and preferences for information filtering systems, which are effective, scalable, and easily interpretable by humans. We focus on two prominent types of user traces in social networks: on the one hand, user comments accompanied by unary preferences such as likes, and on the other hand, user reviews accompanied by numerical preferences such as star ratings. In both cases, we advocate that by better understanding user text through mining its semantics and modeling its structure, we can not only improve information filtering, but also explain predictions to users. Within this context, we aim to answer three main research questions, namely: (i)~how do item semantics help to predict unary preferences; (ii)~how do sentiments of free-form user texts help to predict unary preferences; and (iii)~how to model fine-grained numerical preferences from user review texts. Our goal is to model and extract from user text the knowledge required to answer these questions, and to obtain insights on how to design better information filtering systems that are more effective and improve user experience. To answer the first question, we formulate the recommendation problem based on unary preferences as a top-N retrieval task and we define an appropriate dataset and metrics for measuring performance. Then, we propose and evaluate several content-based methods based on semantic similarities under presence or absence of preferences. To answer the second question, we propose a sentiment-aware neighborhood model which integrates the sentiment of user comments with unary preferences, either through fixed or through learned mapping functions. For the latter type, we propose a learning algorithm which adapts the sentiment of user comments to unary preferences at collective or individual levels. To answer the third question, we cast the problem of modeling user attitude toward aspects of items as a weakly supervised problem, and we propose a weighted multiple-instance learning method for solving it. Lastly, we show that the learned saliency weights, apart from being easily interpretable, are useful indicators for review segmentation and summarization

    Perspectives for Electronic Books in the World Wide Web Age

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    While the World Wide Web (WWW or Web) is steadily expanding, electronic books (e-books) remain a niche market. In this article, it is first postulated that specialized contents and device independence can make Web-based e-books compete with paper prints; and that adaptive features that can be implemented by client-side computing are relevant for e-books, while more complex forms of adaptation requiring server-side computations are not. Then, enhancements of the WWW standards (specifically of XML, XHTML, of the style-sheet languages CSS and XSL, and of the linking language XLink) are proposed for a better support of client-side adaptation and device independent content modeling. Finally, advanced browsing functionalities desirable for e-books as well as their implementation in the WWW context are described

    Editable User Profiles for Controllable Text Recommendation

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    Methods for making high-quality recommendations often rely on learning latent representations from interaction data. These methods, while performant, do not provide ready mechanisms for users to control the recommendation they receive. Our work tackles this problem by proposing LACE, a novel concept value bottleneck model for controllable text recommendations. LACE represents each user with a succinct set of human-readable concepts through retrieval given user-interacted documents and learns personalized representations of the concepts based on user documents. This concept based user profile is then leveraged to make recommendations. The design of our model affords control over the recommendations through a number of intuitive interactions with a transparent user profile. We first establish the quality of recommendations obtained from LACE in an offline evaluation on three recommendation tasks spanning six datasets in warm-start, cold-start, and zero-shot setups. Next, we validate the controllability of LACE under simulated user interactions. Finally, we implement LACE in an interactive controllable recommender system and conduct a user study to demonstrate that users are able to improve the quality of recommendations they receive through interactions with an editable user profile.Comment: Accepted to SIGIR 2023; Pre-print, camera-ready to follo

    Future Prospects of Selected Intelligent Decision Technologies and their Deployment in Information Systems

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    This paper presents an overview of technological prospective studies on selected classes of decision support and intelligent information systems. Technological trends and scenarios were generated from simulation experiments with hybrid models consisting of discrete-time control and discrete-event components. These trends were then merged with the outcomes of an innovative Delphi survey. Both techniques yielded a complex information technology model, capable of describing various factors relevant to the evolution and adsorption of intelligent technologies. Specifically, we investigated the development of intelligent decision support systems, recommenders, and specialized information systems supporting e-commerce, e-science, e-learning, and crisis management. The technological evolution model features software development paradigms such as DevOps, Next Release choice, and competition among system suppliers. Additionally, the survey highlighted customers’ preferences and market prospects. The foresight results are presented in the context of overall progress in information systems, software market needs, and user behavior
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