You Do Not Decide for Me!

Evaluating Explainable Group Aggregation Strategies for Tourism

More Info
expand_more

Abstract

Most recommender systems propose items to individual users. However, in domains such as tourism, people often consume items in groups rather than individually. Different individual preferences in such a group can be difficult to resolve, and often compromises need to be made. Social choice strategies can be used to aggregate the preferences of individuals. We evaluated two explainable modified preference aggregation strategies in a between-subject study (n=200), and compared them with two baseline strategies for groups that are also explainable, in two scenarios: high divergence (group members with different travel preferences) and low divergence (group members with similar travel preferences). Generally, all investigated aggregation strategies performed well in terms of perceived individual and group satisfaction and perceived fairness. The results also indicate that participants were sensitive to a dictator-based strategy, which affected both their individual and group satisfaction negatively (compared to the other strategies).

Files

Htfp846_najafianA.pdf
(pdf | 2.75 Mb)
Unknown license
3372923.3404800.pdf
(pdf | 3.18 Mb)
Unknown license

Download not available