Tags as bridges between domains improving recommendation with tag-induced cross-domain collaborative filtering

Recommender systems generally face the challenge of making predictions using only the relatively few user ratings available for a given domain. Cross-domain collaborative filtering (CF) aims to alleviate the effects of this data sparseness by transferring knowledge from other domains. We propose a n...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inProceedings of the 19th international conference on User modeling, adaption, and personalization pp. 305 - 316
Main Authors Shi, Yue, Larson, Martha, Hanjalic, Alan
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published Berlin, Heidelberg Springer-Verlag 11.07.2011
SeriesACM Conferences
Subjects
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ISBN3642223613
9783642223617
DOI10.5555/2021855.2021882

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Summary:Recommender systems generally face the challenge of making predictions using only the relatively few user ratings available for a given domain. Cross-domain collaborative filtering (CF) aims to alleviate the effects of this data sparseness by transferring knowledge from other domains. We propose a novel algorithm, Tag-induced Cross-Domain Collaborative Filtering (TagCDCF), which exploits user-contributed tags that are common to multiple domains in order to establish the cross-domain links necessary for successful cross-domain CF. TagCDCF extends the state-of-the-art matrix factorization by introducing a constraint involving tag-based similarities between pairs of users and pairs of items across domains. The method requires no common users or items across domains. Using two publicly available CF data sets as different domains, we experimentally demonstrate that TagCDCF substantially outperforms other state-of-the-art single domain CF and cross-domain CF approaches. Additional experiments show that TagCDCF addresses data sparseness and illustrate the influence of the number of tags used by users in both domains.
ISBN:3642223613
9783642223617
DOI:10.5555/2021855.2021882