Improving and Evaluating the Detection of Fragmentation in News Recommendations with the Clustering of News Story Chains

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2023
Host editors
  • S. Vrijenhoek
  • L. Michiels
  • J. Kruse
  • A. Starke
  • J. Viader Guerrero
  • N. Tintarev
Book title Proceedings of the First Workshop on the Normative Design and Evaluation of Recommender Systems (NORMalize 2023)
Book subtitle co-located with the 17th ACM Conference on Recommender Systems (RecSys 2023) : Singapore, Singapore, September 19, 2023
Series CEUR Workshop Proceedings
Event 1st Workshop on the Normative Design and Evaluation of Recommender Systems
Article number 3
Number of pages 16
Publisher Aachen: CEUR-WS
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Institute for Information Law (IViR)
Abstract

News recommender systems play an increasingly influential role in shaping information access within democratic societies. However, tailoring recommendations to users' specific interests can result in the divergence of information streams. Fragmented access to information poses challenges to the integrity of the public sphere, thereby influencing democracy and public discourse. The Fragmentation metric quantifies the degree of fragmentation of information streams in news recommendations. Accurate measurement of this metric requires the application of Natural Language Processing (NLP) to identify distinct news events, stories, or timelines. This paper presents an extensive investigation of various approaches for quantifying Fragmentation in news recommendations. These approaches are evaluated both intrinsically, by measuring performance on news story clustering, and extrinsically, by assessing the Fragmentation scores of different simulated news recommender scenarios. Our findings demonstrate that agglomerative hierarchical clustering coupled with SentenceBERT text representation is substantially better at detecting Fragmentation than earlier implementations. Additionally, the analysis of simulated scenarios yields valuable insights and recommendations for stakeholders concerning the measurement and interpretation of Fragmentation.

Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3639/paper3.pdf
Other links https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3639 https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85185886287
Downloads
paper3-2 (Final published version)
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