Using Shortlists to Support Decision Making and Improve Recommender System Performance

October 26, 2015 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› The Web Conference

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Authors Tobias Schnabel, Paul N. Bennett, Susan T. Dumais, Thorsten Joachims arXiv ID 1510.07545 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.IR, cs.LG Citations 39 Venue The Web Conference Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
In this paper, we study shortlists as an interface component for recommender systems with the dual goal of supporting the user's decision process, as well as improving implicit feedback elicitation for increased recommendation quality. A shortlist is a temporary list of candidates that the user is currently considering, e.g., a list of a few movies the user is currently considering for viewing. From a cognitive perspective, shortlists serve as digital short-term memory where users can off-load the items under consideration -- thereby decreasing their cognitive load. From a machine learning perspective, adding items to the shortlist generates a new implicit feedback signal as a by-product of exploration and decision making which can improve recommendation quality. Shortlisting therefore provides additional data for training recommendation systems without the increases in cognitive load that requesting explicit feedback would incur. We perform an user study with a movie recommendation setup to compare interfaces that offer shortlist support with those that do not. From the user studies we conclude: (i) users make better decisions with a shortlist; (ii) users prefer an interface with shortlist support; and (iii) the additional implicit feedback from sessions with a shortlist improves the quality of recommendations by nearly a factor of two.
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