Exploiting crowd sourced reviews to explain movie recommendation

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Abstract

Streaming services such as Netflix, M-Go, and Hulu use advanced recommender systems to help their customers identify relevant content quickly and easily. These recommenders display the list of recommended movies organized in sublists labeled with the genre or some more specific labels. Unfortunately, existing methods to extract these labeled sublists require human annotators to manually label movies, which is time-consuming and biased by the views of annotators. In this paper, we design a method that relies on crowd sourced reviews to automatically identify groups of similar movies and label these groups. Our method takes the content of movie reviews available online as input for an algorithm based on Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) that identifies groups of similar movies. We separate the set of similar movies that share the same combination of genre in sublists and personalize the movies to show in each sublist using matrix factorization. The results of a side-by-side comparison of our method against Technicolor’s M-Go VoD service are encouraging.

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APA

El Aouad, S., Dupuy, C., Teixeira, R., Bach, F., & Diot, C. (2016). Exploiting crowd sourced reviews to explain movie recommendation. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 9944 LNCS, pp. 193–201). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-46140-3_15

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