Longitudinal Impact of Preference Biases on Recommender Systems’ Performance
Authors: Zhou, Meizi; Zhang, Jingjing; Adomavicius, Gediminas
Journal: Information Systems Research (2024)
<jats:p> Recommender systems are ubiquitous on various online platforms and provide significant value to the users in helping them find relevant content/items to consume. After item consumption, users can often provide feedback (i.e., their preference ratings for the item) to the system. Research studies have shown that recommender systems’ predictions, observed by users, can cause biases in users’ postconsumption preference ratings. Because these ratings are typically fed back to the system as training data for future predictions, this process is likely to influence the system’s performance over time. We use a simulation approach to investigate the longitudinal impact of preference biases on the dynamics of recommender systems’ performance. Our results reveal that preference biases significantly impair recommendation performance and users’ consumption outcomes, and larger biases cause disproportionately large negative effects. Additionally, less popular and less distinctive (in terms of their content) items are more susceptible to preference biases. Furthermore, considering the substantial impact of preference biases on recommendation performance, we examine the issue of debiasin…