Content-based recommender systems (CBRSs) rely on item and user descriptions (content) to build item representations and user profiles that can be effectively exploited to suggest items similar to those a target user already liked in the past. Most content-based recommender systems use textual features to represent items and user profiles, hence they suffer from the classical problems of natural language ambiguity. This chapter presents a comprehensive survey ofsemanticrepresentations of items and user profiles that attempt to overcome the main problems of the simpler approaches based on keywords. We propose a classification of semantic approaches intotop-down and bottom-up. The former rely on the integration of external knowledge sources, such as ontologies, encyclopedic knowledge and data from the Linked Data cloud, while the latter rely on a lightweight semantic representation based on the hypothesis that the meaning of words depends on their use in large corpora of textual documents. The chapter shows how to make recommender systems aware of semantics to realize a new generation of content-based recommenders.
Semantics-aware content-based recommender systems
de GEMMIS, MARCO;LOPS, PASQUALE;MUSTO, CATALDO;NARDUCCI, FEDELUCIO;SEMERARO, Giovanni
2015-01-01
Abstract
Content-based recommender systems (CBRSs) rely on item and user descriptions (content) to build item representations and user profiles that can be effectively exploited to suggest items similar to those a target user already liked in the past. Most content-based recommender systems use textual features to represent items and user profiles, hence they suffer from the classical problems of natural language ambiguity. This chapter presents a comprehensive survey ofsemanticrepresentations of items and user profiles that attempt to overcome the main problems of the simpler approaches based on keywords. We propose a classification of semantic approaches intotop-down and bottom-up. The former rely on the integration of external knowledge sources, such as ontologies, encyclopedic knowledge and data from the Linked Data cloud, while the latter rely on a lightweight semantic representation based on the hypothesis that the meaning of words depends on their use in large corpora of textual documents. The chapter shows how to make recommender systems aware of semantics to realize a new generation of content-based recommenders.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.