FEIR:量化和减少羡慕嫉妒恨,公平推荐有限资源

IF 7.2 4区 计算机科学 Q1 COMPUTER SCIENCE, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology Pub Date : 2024-02-03 DOI:10.1145/3643891
Nan Li, Bo Kang, Jefrey Lijffijt, Tijl De Bie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

电子招聘和在线约会等环境下的推荐涉及分配有限的机会,这与电子商务或音乐推荐等实际上无限的商品推荐不同。在这种情况下,需要采用新颖的方法来量化和执行公平性。事实上,典型的推荐系统会向每个用户推荐其最相关的项目,这样,理想的项目可能会同时推荐给更多和更少的合格个人。可以说,这对后者是不公平的。事实上,当他们寻求这种理想的推荐时(例如申请工作),他们不太可能成功。为了量化这种情况下的公平性,我们引入了 "劣势":一种新颖的(非)公平性衡量标准,可以量化用户在其推荐项目中的竞争劣势。劣势与妒忌是互补的:妒忌是以前提出的一种公平概念,它量化了用户在多大程度上更喜欢其他用户的推荐而不是自己的推荐。我们建议将 "自卑 "和 "嫉妒 "与一种名为 "效用 "的与准确性相关的测量方法结合起来使用:"效用 "是指推荐项目的相关性总分。遗憾的是,这三种衡量标准都不是可微分的,因此很难对它们进行优化,也限制了它们在评估中的直接使用。为了解决这个问题,我们根据推荐系统的概率解释对它们进行了重新表述,从而得到了可微分的版本。我们展示了如何将这些损失函数结合到一个多目标优化问题中,我们称之为 FEIR(通过减少嫉妒和自卑实现公平),用作任何标准推荐系统得分的后处理。在合成数据和真实世界数据上的实验表明,与天真的推荐方法以及在工作推荐中缓解拥堵这一相关问题的最先进方法相比,所提出的方法有效地改善了自卑、嫉妒和效用之间的权衡。我们讨论并增强了我们的研究结果对现实世界中各种推荐场景的实际影响,我们还提供了可视化工具的实现方法,使羡慕度和自卑度指标更易于理解。
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FEIR: Quantifying and Reducing Envy and Inferiority for Fair Recommendation of Limited Resources

Recommendation in settings such as e-recruitment and online dating involves distributing limited opportunities, which differs from recommending practically unlimited goods such as in e-commerce or music recommendation. This setting calls for novel approaches to quantify and enforce fairness. Indeed, typical recommender systems recommend each user their top relevant items, such that desirable items may be recommended simultaneously to more and to less qualified individuals. This is arguably unfair to the latter. Indeed, when they pursue such a desirable recommendation (e.g. by applying for a job), they are unlikely to be successful.

To quantify fairness in such settings, we introduce inferiority: a novel (un)fairness measure that quantifies the competitive disadvantage of a user for their recommended items. Inferiority is complementary to envy: a previously-proposed fairness notion that quantifies the extent to which a user prefers other users’ recommendations over their own. We propose to use both inferiority and envy in combination with an accuracy-related measure called utility: the aggregated relevancy scores of the recommended items. Unfortunately, none of these three measures are differentiable, making it hard to optimize them, and restricting their immediate use to evaluation only. To remedy this, we reformulate them in the context of a probabilistic interpretation of recommender systems, resulting in differentiable versions. We show how these loss functions can be combined in a multi-objective optimization problem that we call FEIR (Fairness through Envy and Inferiority Reduction), used as a post-processing of the scores from any standard recommender system.

Experiments on synthetic and real-world data show that the proposed approach effectively improves the trade-offs between inferiority, envy and utility, compared to the naive recommendation and the state of the art method for the related problem of congestion alleviation in job recommendation. We discuss and enhance the practical impact of our findings on a wide range of real-world recommendation scenarios, and we offer implementations of visualization tools to render the envy and inferiority metrics more accessible.

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来源期刊
ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology
ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology COMPUTER SCIENCE, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE-COMPUTER SCIENCE, INFORMATION SYSTEMS
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
2.00%
发文量
131
期刊介绍: ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology is a scholarly journal that publishes the highest quality papers on intelligent systems, applicable algorithms and technology with a multi-disciplinary perspective. An intelligent system is one that uses artificial intelligence (AI) techniques to offer important services (e.g., as a component of a larger system) to allow integrated systems to perceive, reason, learn, and act intelligently in the real world. ACM TIST is published quarterly (six issues a year). Each issue has 8-11 regular papers, with around 20 published journal pages or 10,000 words per paper. Additional references, proofs, graphs or detailed experiment results can be submitted as a separate appendix, while excessively lengthy papers will be rejected automatically. Authors can include online-only appendices for additional content of their published papers and are encouraged to share their code and/or data with other readers.
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