Serendipity in recommender systems
The number of goods and services (such as accommodation or music streaming)
offered by e-commerce websites does not allow users to examine all the available options in a reasonable amount of time. Recommender systems are auxiliary
systems designed to help users find interesting goods or services (items) on a
website when the number of available items is overwhelming. Traditionally, recommender systems have been optimized for accuracy, which indicates how often
a user consumed the items recommended by system. To increase accuracy, recommender systems often suggest items that are popular and suitably similar to
items these users have consumed in the past. As a result, users often lose interest in using these systems, as they either know about the recommended items
already or can easily find these items themselves. One way to increase user satisfaction and user retention is to suggest serendipitous items. These items are items
that users would not find themselves or even look for, but would enjoy consuming. Serendipity in recommender systems has not been thoroughly investigated.
There is not even a consensus on the concept’s definition. In this dissertation,
serendipitous items are defined as relevant, novel and unexpected to a user.
In this dissertation, we (a) review different definitions of the concept and
evaluate them in a user study, (b) assess the proportion of serendipitous items in a
typical recommender system, (c) review ways to measure and improve serendipity, (d) investigate serendipity in cross-domain recommender systems (systems
that take advantage of multiple domains, such as movies, songs and books) and
(e) discuss challenges and future directions concerning this topic.
We applied a Design Science methodology as the framework for this study
and developed four artifacts: (1) a collection of eight variations of serendipity
definition, (2) a measure of the serendipity of suggested items, (3) an algorithm
that generates serendipitous suggestions, (4) a dataset of user feedback regarding
serendipitous movies in the recommender system MovieLens. These artifacts are
evaluated using suitable methods and communicated through publications.
...
Publisher
University of JyväskyläISBN
978-951-39-7438-1ISSN Search the Publication Forum
1456-5390Keywords
serendipisyys recommender systems serendipity relevance novelty unexpectedness personalization evaluation recommendation algorithms evaluation metrics offline experiments user study serendipity metrics Käyttäjätutkimus suosittelujärjestelmät verkkopalvelut verkkokauppa täsmämarkkinointi algoritmit arviointi sattuma relevanssi
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