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ECRA
2010

Inferring preference correlations from social networks

13 years 4 months ago
Inferring preference correlations from social networks
Identifying consumer preferences is a key challenge in customizing electronic commerce sites to individual users. The increasing availability of online social networks provides one approach to this problem: people linked in these networks often share preferences, allowing inference of interest in products based on knowledge of a consumer's network neighbors and their interests. This paper evaluates the benefits of inference from online social networks in two contexts: a random graph model and a web site allowing people to both express preferences and form distinct social and preference links. We determine conditions on network topology and preference correlations leading to extended clusters of people with similar interests. Knowledge of when such clusters occur improves the usefulness of social network-based inference for identifying products likely to interest consumers based on information from a few people in the network. Such estimates could help sellers design customized bu...
Tad Hogg
Added 10 Dec 2010
Updated 10 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2010
Where ECRA
Authors Tad Hogg
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