3.8 Proceedings Paper

PRINCE: Provider-side Interpretability with Counterfactual Explanations in Recommender Systems

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
DOI: 10.1145/3336191.3371824

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Funding

  1. ERC [610150]
  2. DFG Collaborative Research Center 1223
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [610150] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Interpretable explanations for recommender systems and other machine learning models are crucial to gain user trust. Prior works that have focused on paths connecting users and items in a heterogeneous network have several limitations, such as discovering relationships rather than true explanations, or disregarding other users' privacy. In this work, we take a fresh perspective, and present PRINCE: a provider-side mechanism to produce tangible explanations for end-users, where an explanation is defined to be a set of minimal actions performed by the user that, if removed, changes the recommendation to a different item. Given a recommendation, PRINCE uses a polynomial-time optimal algorithm for finding this minimal set of a user's actions from an exponential search space, based on random walks over dynamic graphs. Experiments on two real-world datasets show that PRINCE provides more compact explanations than intuitive baselines, and insights from a crowdsourced user-study demonstrate the viability of such action-based explanations. We thus posit that PRINCE produces scrutable, actionable, and concise explanations, owing to its use of counterfactual evidence, a user's own actions, and minimal sets, respectively.

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