Much work has been done on developing recommender system (RS) algorithms, on comparing them using business metrics (such as customers' trust or perception of recommendations' novelty) and on exploring users' reactions to recommendations. It was demonstrated that different recommender systems perform differently on several performance metrics and that different users react differently to the same kind of recommendations. As a consequence, some scholars challenged to explore how users with different tendency to seek information during their purchasing process may react to different kind of recommendations. To the best of our knowledge, none of the prior works studied if users' tendency to seek information has an effect on recommender systems' performance. Different users may traditionally have different propensity to seek information and to receive suggestions and therefore they may react differently to the same recommendations. To this aim, we performed a live experiment with real customers coming from a European firm.
Does the users' tendency to seek information affect recommender systems' performance? / Panniello, Umberto; Ardito, Lorenzo; Petruzzelli, Antonio Messeni. - In: JOURNAL OF UNIVERSAL COMPUTER SCIENCE. - ISSN 0948-695X. - STAMPA. - 23:2(2017), pp. 187-207.
Does the users' tendency to seek information affect recommender systems' performance?
Panniello, Umberto;Ardito, Lorenzo;Petruzzelli, Antonio Messeni
2017-01-01
Abstract
Much work has been done on developing recommender system (RS) algorithms, on comparing them using business metrics (such as customers' trust or perception of recommendations' novelty) and on exploring users' reactions to recommendations. It was demonstrated that different recommender systems perform differently on several performance metrics and that different users react differently to the same kind of recommendations. As a consequence, some scholars challenged to explore how users with different tendency to seek information during their purchasing process may react to different kind of recommendations. To the best of our knowledge, none of the prior works studied if users' tendency to seek information has an effect on recommender systems' performance. Different users may traditionally have different propensity to seek information and to receive suggestions and therefore they may react differently to the same recommendations. To this aim, we performed a live experiment with real customers coming from a European firm.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.