20,276 research outputs found
Privacy and Fairness in Recommender Systems via Adversarial Training of User Representations
Latent factor models for recommender systems represent users and items as low
dimensional vectors. Privacy risks of such systems have previously been studied
mostly in the context of recovery of personal information in the form of usage
records from the training data. However, the user representations themselves
may be used together with external data to recover private user information
such as gender and age. In this paper we show that user vectors calculated by a
common recommender system can be exploited in this way. We propose the
privacy-adversarial framework to eliminate such leakage of private information,
and study the trade-off between recommender performance and leakage both
theoretically and empirically using a benchmark dataset. An advantage of the
proposed method is that it also helps guarantee fairness of results, since all
implicit knowledge of a set of attributes is scrubbed from the representations
used by the model, and thus can't enter into the decision making. We discuss
further applications of this method towards the generation of deeper and more
insightful recommendations.Comment: International Conference on Pattern Recognition and Method
Panel on future challenges in modeling methodology
This panel paper presents the views of six researchers and practitioners of simulation modeling. Collectively we attempt to address a range of key future challenges to modeling methodology. It is hoped that the views of this paper, and the presentations made by the panelists at the 2004 Winter Simulation Conference will raise awareness and stimulate further discussion on the future of modeling methodology in areas such as modeling problems in business applications, human factors and geographically dispersed networks; rapid model development and maintenance; legacy modeling approaches; markup languages; virtual interactive process design and simulation; standards; and Grid computing
Decentralized collaborative transport of fabrics using micro-UAVs
Small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have generally little capacity to carry
payloads. Through collaboration, the UAVs can increase their joint payload
capacity and carry more significant loads. For maximum flexibility to dynamic
and unstructured environments and task demands, we propose a fully
decentralized control infrastructure based on a swarm-specific scripting
language, Buzz. In this paper, we describe the control infrastructure and use
it to compare two algorithms for collaborative transport: field potentials and
spring-damper. We test the performance of our approach with a fleet of
micro-UAVs, demonstrating the potential of decentralized control for
collaborative transport.Comment: Submitted to 2019 International Conference on Robotics and Automation
(ICRA). 6 page
Optimization in Knowledge-Intensive Crowdsourcing
We present SmartCrowd, a framework for optimizing collaborative
knowledge-intensive crowdsourcing. SmartCrowd distinguishes itself by
accounting for human factors in the process of assigning tasks to workers.
Human factors designate workers' expertise in different skills, their expected
minimum wage, and their availability. In SmartCrowd, we formulate task
assignment as an optimization problem, and rely on pre-indexing workers and
maintaining the indexes adaptively, in such a way that the task assignment
process gets optimized both qualitatively, and computation time-wise. We
present rigorous theoretical analyses of the optimization problem and propose
optimal and approximation algorithms. We finally perform extensive performance
and quality experiments using real and synthetic data to demonstrate that
adaptive indexing in SmartCrowd is necessary to achieve efficient high quality
task assignment.Comment: 12 page
- …