Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4944250 Information Sciences 2017 40 Pages PDF
Abstract
In Recommender Systems, the techniques used for modeling implicit feedback such as search, click or purchase actions have been well studied. As additional information, contexts are often available to assist the implicit feedback approaches. The existing context-aware methods are used to directly model original contextual factors for recommendations. However, this way of utilizing contextual information makes the methods dependent on specific contexts. Moreover, they may not achieve the desired performance if the contexts are changed to those derived from other domains. To address this issue, we propose a general approach to incorporate contexts into an implicit feedback modeling framework that can utilize specific contexts but is domain independent. First, we introduce context neighbors to integrate original contextual factors. The neighbors are aggregated to form several groups. Then, our recommender builds on group interactions that expand the traditional user-item interactions. Finally, the recommendations are obtained by combining the results of all the interaction models. We evaluate the Context Neighbor Recommender (CNR) for different choices of neighbor numbers and kernel settings to further compare it with other algorithms. The experimental results show the advantages and flexibility of CNR compared to both implicit feedback methods and common context-aware models.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Artificial Intelligence
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