Inductive Conformal Recommender System
This addresses the need for reliable uncertainty estimates in real-world recommendation applications, though it is incremental as it builds on existing conformal frameworks.
The paper tackles the problem of quantifying uncertainty in recommendation systems by introducing an inductive variant of a conformal recommender system, which improves computation time while preserving accuracy, as demonstrated on ten benchmark datasets.
Traditional recommendation algorithms develop techniques that can help people to choose desirable items. However, in many real-world applications, along with a set of recommendations, it is also essential to quantify each recommendation's (un)certainty. The conformal recommender system uses the experience of a user to output a set of recommendations, each associated with a precise confidence value. Given a significance level $\varepsilon$, it provides a bound $\varepsilon$ on the probability of making a wrong recommendation. The conformal framework uses a key concept called \emph{nonconformity measure} that measures the strangeness of an item concerning other items. One of the significant design challenges of any conformal recommendation framework is integrating nonconformity measures with the recommendation algorithm. This paper introduces an inductive variant of a conformal recommender system. We propose and analyze different nonconformity measures in the inductive setting. We also provide theoretical proofs on the error-bound and the time complexity. Extensive empirical analysis on ten benchmark datasets demonstrates that the inductive variant substantially improves the performance in computation time while preserving the accuracy.