UniRecSys: A Unified Framework for Personalized, Group, Package, and Package-to-Group Recommendations

August 08, 2023 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Knowledge-Based Systems

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Authors Adamya Shyam, Vikas Kumar, Venkateswara Rao Kagita, Arun K Pujari arXiv ID 2308.04247 Category cs.IR: Information Retrieval Citations 4 Venue Knowledge-Based Systems Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Recommender systems aim to enhance the overall user experience by providing tailored recommendations for a variety of products and services. These systems help users make more informed decisions, leading to greater user engagement with the platform. However, the implementation of these systems largely depends on the context, which can vary from recommending an item or package to a user or a group. This requires careful exploration of several models during the deployment, as there is no comprehensive and unified approach that deals with recommendations at different levels. Furthermore, these individual models must be closely attuned to their generated recommendations depending on the context to prevent significant variation in their generated recommendations. In this paper, we propose a novel unified recommendation framework that addresses all four recommendation tasks, namely, personalized, group, package, and package-to-group recommendation, filling the gap in the current research landscape. The proposed framework can be integrated with most of the traditional matrix factorization-based collaborative filtering (CF) models. This research underscores the significance of including group and package information while learning latent representations of users and items for personalized recommendations. These components help in exploiting a rich latent representation of the user/item by enforcing them to align closely with their corresponding group/package representation. We consider two prominent CF techniques, namely Regularized Matrix Factorization and Maximum Margin Matrix factorization, as the baseline models and demonstrate their customization to various recommendation tasks. Experimental results on two publicly available datasets are reported, comparing them to other baseline approaches for various recommendation tasks.
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