Asad Sayeed, Soumitra Sarkar, et al.
CIKM 2009
This work investigates personalized social search based on the user's social relations - search results are re-ranked according to their relations with individuals in the user's social network. We study the effectiveness of several social network types for personalization: (1) Familiarity-based network of people related to the user through explicit familiarity connection; (2) Similarity-based network of people "similar" to the user as reflected by their social activity; (3) Overall network that provides both relationship types. For comparison we also experiment with Topic-based personalization that is based on the user's related terms, aggregated from several social applications. We evaluate the contribution of the different personalization strategies by an off-line study and by a user survey within our organization. In the off-line study we apply bookmark-based evaluation, suggested recently, that exploits data gathered from a social bookmarking system to evaluate personalized retrieval. In the on-line study we analyze the feedback of 240 employees exposed to the alternative personalization approaches. Our main results show that both in the off-line study and in the user survey social network based personalization significantly outperforms non-personalized social search. Additionally, as reflected by the user survey, all three SN-based strategies significantly outperform the Topic-based strategy. Copyright 2009 ACM.
Asad Sayeed, Soumitra Sarkar, et al.
CIKM 2009
Inbal Ronen, Elad Shahar, et al.
SIGIR 2009
David Carmel, Haggai Roitman, et al.
ACM TIST
Ido Guy, Naama Zwerdling, et al.
SIGIR 2010