4.6 Article

Unifying user similarity and social trust to generate powerful recommendations for smart cities using collaborating filtering-based recommender systems

Journal

SOFT COMPUTING
Volume 24, Issue 15, Pages 11071-11094

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00500-019-04588-x

Keywords

Smart cities; Social trust network; Explicit trust; Implicit trust; Unified rating significance

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Recommender systems can improve the quality of life in smart cities by presenting personalized services to the community. Such systems maintain a database of user profiles for producing recommendations for a specific user. The collaborative filtering (CF) approach used in these systems has become a benchmark approach for generating recommendations for interested users because it can provide out of the box solutions. These CF-based approaches first construct a user-item rating matrix and then exploit similarity methods. These approaches suffer from scalability, sparsity, and cold user conditions, which consequently result in the poor recommendation accuracy of these systems. To enhance the accuracy of recommender systems, social trust can play a vital role because people tend to interact with a system or respond positively to recommendations that originate from their social trustworthy friends. The proposed unified approach of this article uses explicit trust, implicit trust, and user preference similarity to create a unified rating profile for the target user to produce more powerful and accurate recommendations. The proposed unified approach also enhances the recommendation performance of CF-based recommender systems when only a limited set of ratings is available. Experiments are performed on three publicly available datasets which are FilmTrust, CiaoDVD, and Epinions. Comparison of obtained results is made with traditional similarity measures as well as up-to-date trust-based approaches. The results show that the proposed unified approach is superior to existing approaches in terms of both predictive and classification-based accuracy measures.

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