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<item>
  <title>Social network collaborative filtering</title>
  <link>http://www.hpl.hp.com/research/scl/papers/sncf/</link>
  <minidescription>User-generated social networking links can be as predictive as algorithmically 
  identified "neighbors" in recommender systems.</minidescription>
  <tags>
	  <tag>collaborative filtering</tag>
	  <tag>social networks</tag>
	  <tag>prediction</tag>
	<tag>recommender systems</tag>
		<tag>essembly</tag>

  </tags> 
  <description>This paper demonstrates that "social network collaborative 
filtering" (SNCF), wherein user-selected like-minded alters are used to 
make predictions, can rival traditional user-to-user collaborative filtering (CF) 
in predictive accuracy. Using a unique data set from an online community 
where users rated items and also created social networking links specifically 
intended to represent like-minded allies, we use SNCF and traditional CF 
to predict ratings by networked users. We find that SNCF using generic "friend" 
alters is moderately worse than the better CF techniques, but outperforms 
benchmarks such as by-item or by-user average rating; generic friends often are not like-minded. 
However, SNCF using "ally" alters is competitive with CF. These results are significant 
because SNCF is tremendously more computationally efficient than traditional 
user-user CF and may be implemented in large-scale web commerce and social 
networking communities. It is notoriously difficult to distinguish the contributions 
of social influence (where allies influence users) and social selection 
(where users are simply effective at selecting like-minded people as their allies). 
Nonetheless, comparing similarity over time, we do show no evidence of strong 
social influence among allies or friends.
	</description>
	<author>Rong Zheng, Dennis M. Wilkinson and Foster Provost</author>
  <pubDate>2008-10-06 12:00:00</pubDate>
</item>
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