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Contribution Details

Type Journal Article
Scope Discipline-based scholarship
Title Evaluating explainable social choice-based aggregation strategies for group recommendation
Organization Unit
Authors
  • Francesco Barile
  • Tim Draws
  • Oana Inel
  • Alisa Rieger
  • Shabnam Najafian
  • Amir Ebrahimi Fard
  • Rishav Hada
  • Nava Tintarev
Item Subtype Original Work
Refereed No
Status Published in final form
Language
  • English
Journal Title User modeling and user-adapted interaction
Publisher Springer
Geographical Reach international
ISSN 1573-1391
Volume 34
Number 1
Page Range 1 - 58
Date 2024
Abstract Text Social choice aggregation strategies have been proposed as an explainable way to generate recommendations to groups of users. However, it is not trivial to determine the best strategy to apply for a specific group. Previous work highlighted that the performance of a group recommender system is affected by the internal diversity of the group members’ preferences. However, few of them have empirically evaluated how the specific distribution of preferences in a group determines which strategy is the most effective. Furthermore, only a few studies evaluated the impact of providing explanations for the recommendations generated with social choice aggregation strategies, by evaluating explanations and aggregation strategies in a coupled way. To fill these gaps, we present two user studies (N=399 and N=288) examining the effectiveness of social choice aggregation strategies in terms of users’ fairness perception, consensus perception, and satisfaction. We study the impact of the level of (dis-)agreement within the group on the performance of these strategies. Furthermore, we investigate the added value of textual explanations of the underlying social choice aggregation strategy used to generate the recommendation. The results of both user studies show no benefits in using social choice-based explanations for group recommendations. However, we find significant differences in the effectiveness of the social choice-based aggregation strategies in both studies. Furthermore, the specific group configuration (i.e., various scenarios of internal diversity) seems to determine the most effective aggregation strategy. These results provide useful insights on how to select the appropriate aggregation strategy for a specific group based on the level of (dis-)agreement within the group members’ preferences.
Free access at DOI
Digital Object Identifier 10.1007/s11257-023-09363-0
Other Identification Number merlin-id:24184
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