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- Blockbuster Culture's Next Rise or Fall: The Impact of Recommender Systems on Sales Diversity
Title:
Blockbuster Culture's Next Rise or Fall: The Impact of Recommender Systems on Sales Diversity
Authors: Fleder, Daniel - The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Hosanagar, Kartik - The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Hosanagar, Kartik - The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Issue Date: 2007
Series/Report no.: NET Institute Working Paper;07-10
Abstract: This paper examines the effect of recommender systems on the diversity
of sales. Two anecdotal views exist about such effects. Some believe
recommenders help consumers discover new products and thus increase
sales diversity. Others believe recommenders only reinforce the
popularity of already popular products. This paper seeks to reconcile
these seemingly incompatible views. We explore the question in two ways.
First, modeling recommender systems analytically allows us to explore
their path dependent effects. Second, turning to simulation, we increase
the realism of our results by combining choice models with actual
implementations of recommender systems. Our main result is that some
well known recommenders can lead to a reduction in sales diversity.
Because common recommenders (e.g., collaborative filters) recommend
products based on sales and ratings, they cannot recommend products with
limited historical data, even if they would be rated favorably. In turn,
these recommenders can create a rich-get-richer effect for popular
products and vice-versa for unpopular ones. This bias toward popularity
can prevent what may otherwise be better consumer-product matches. That
diversity can decrease is surprising to consumers who express that
recommendations have helped them discover new products. In line with
this, we show it is possible for individual-level diversity to increase
but aggregate diversity to decrease. Recommenders can push each person
to new products, but they often push similar users toward the same
products. We show how basic design choices affect the outcome, and thus
managers can choose recommender designs that are more consistent with
their sales goals and consumers' preferences.
Appears in Collections: NET Institute Working Papers Series
Files in This Item:
| File | Description | Size | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fleder-Hosanagar_07-10.pdf | 1.11 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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