Learning to Rank for Maps at Airbnb

June 25, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining

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Authors Malay Haldar, Hongwei Zhang, Kedar Bellare, Sherry Chen, Soumyadip Banerjee, Xiaotang Wang, Mustafa Abdool, Huiji Gao, Pavan Tapadia, Liwei He, Sanjeev Katariya arXiv ID 2407.00091 Category cs.IR: Information Retrieval Cross-listed cs.HC, cs.LG Citations 3 Venue Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
As a two-sided marketplace, Airbnb brings together hosts who own listings for rent with prospective guests from around the globe. Results from a guest's search for listings are displayed primarily through two interfaces: (1) as a list of rectangular cards that contain on them the listing image, price, rating, and other details, referred to as list-results (2) as oval pins on a map showing the listing price, called map-results. Both these interfaces, since their inception, have used the same ranking algorithm that orders listings by their booking probabilities and selects the top listings for display. But some of the basic assumptions underlying ranking, built for a world where search results are presented as lists, simply break down for maps. This paper describes how we rebuilt ranking for maps by revising the mathematical foundations of how users interact with search results. Our iterative and experiment-driven approach led us through a path full of twists and turns, ending in a unified theory for the two interfaces. Our journey shows how assumptions taken for granted when designing machine learning algorithms may not apply equally across all user interfaces, and how they can be adapted. The net impact was one of the largest improvements in user experience for Airbnb which we discuss as a series of experimental validations.
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