Silence is Also Evidence: Interpreting Dwell Time for Recommendation from Psychological Perspective

被引:0
|
作者
Yin, Peifeng [1 ]
Luo, Ping [2 ]
Lee, Wang-Chien [1 ]
Wang, Min [3 ]
机构
[1] Penn State Univ, Dept Comp Sci & Engn, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
[2] Hewlett Packard Labs China, Beijing, Peoples R China
[3] Google Res, Mountain View, CA USA
关键词
dwell time; recommendation; psychological;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
TP18 [人工智能理论];
学科分类号
081104 ; 0812 ; 0835 ; 1405 ;
摘要
Social media is a platform for people to share and vote content. From the analysis of the social media data we found that users are quite inactive in rating/voting. For example, a user on average only votes 2 out of 100 accessed items. Traditional recommendation methods are mostly based on users' votes and thus can not cope with this situation. Based on the observation that the dwell time on an item may reflect the opinion of a user, we aim to enrich the user-vote matrix by converting the dwell time on items into users' "pseudo votes" and then help improve recommendation performance. However, it is challenging to correctly interpret the dwell time since many subjective human factors, e.g. user expectation, sensitivity to various item qualities, reading speed, are involved into the casual behavior of online reading. In psychology, it is assumed that people have choice threshold in decision making. The time spent on making decision reflects the decision maker's threshold. This idea inspires us to develop a View-Voting model, which can estimate how much the user likes the viewed item according to her dwell time, and thus make recommendations even if there is no voting data available. Finally, our experimental evaluation shows that the traditional rate-based recommendation's performance is greatly improved with the support of VV model.
引用
收藏
页码:989 / 997
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Using evidence when planning for trial recruitment: An international perspective from time-poor trialists
    Gardner, Heidi R.
    Treweek, Shaun
    Gillies, Katie
    PLOS ONE, 2019, 14 (12):
  • [32] Dissociations in Future Thinking Following Hippocampal Damage: Evidence From Discounting and Time Perspective in Episodic Amnesia
    Kwan, Donna
    Craver, Carl F.
    Green, Leonard
    Myerson, Joel
    Rosenbaum, R. Shayna
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL, 2013, 142 (04) : 1355 - 1369
  • [33] Interpreting Object Clitics in Real Time: Eye-Tracking Evidence from 4-Year-Old and Adult Speakers of Spanish
    Grueter, Theres
    Hurtado, Nereyda
    Fernald, Anne
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 36TH ANNUAL BOSTON UNIVERSITY CONFERENCE ON LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT, VOLS 1 AND 2, 2012, : 213 - +
  • [34] Commentary: Screens, Teens, and Psychological Well-Being: Evidence From Three Time-Use-Diary Studies
    Twenge, Jean M.
    Blake, Andrew B.
    Haidt, Jonathan
    Campbell, W. Keith
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 11
  • [35] The connectedness between uncertainty and exchange rates of oil import countries: new evidence from time and frequency perspective
    Mo, Bin
    Zeng, Haiyu
    Meng, Juan
    Ding, Shaokai
    RESOURCES POLICY, 2024, 88
  • [36] How Compulsive Buying Is Influenced by Time Perspective-Cross-Cultural Evidence from Germany, Ukraine, and China
    Unger, Alexander
    Lyu, Houchao
    Zimbardo, Philip G.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH AND ADDICTION, 2018, 16 (03) : 525 - 544
  • [37] How Compulsive Buying Is Influenced by Time Perspective—Cross-Cultural Evidence from Germany, Ukraine, and China
    Alexander Unger
    Houchao Lyu
    Philip G. Zimbardo
    International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 2018, 16 : 525 - 544
  • [38] When Low Leisure-Time Physical Activity Meets Unsatisfied Psychological Needs: Insights From a Stress-Buffer Perspective
    Gerber, Markus
    Isoard-Gautheur, Sandrine
    Schilling, Rene
    Ludyga, Sebastian
    Brand, Serge
    Colledge, Flora
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 9
  • [39] Gender, sex and desk-based postural behaviour: A systematic review re-interpreting biomechanical evidence from a social perspective ( vol 114, 104073, 2023)
    Mason-Mackay, Anna Ruth
    APPLIED ERGONOMICS, 2025, 123
  • [40] Digital Screen Time Limits and Young Children's Psychological Well-Being: Evidence From a Population-Based Study
    Przybylski, Andrew K.
    Weinstein, Netta
    CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2019, 90 (01) : e56 - e65