Operationalizing Framing to Support Multiperspective Recommendations of Opinion Pieces

Conference Paper (2021)
Author(s)

M Mulder (Student TU Delft)

Oana Inel (TU Delft - Web Information Systems)

J.E.G. Oosterman (Blendle)

Nava Tintarev (Maastricht University)

Research Group
Web Information Systems
Copyright
© 2021 M. Mulder, O. Inel, J.E.G. Oosterman, N. Tintarev
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1145/3442188.3445911
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 M. Mulder, O. Inel, J.E.G. Oosterman, N. Tintarev
Research Group
Web Information Systems
Pages (from-to)
478-488
ISBN (electronic)
978-1-4503-8309-7
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Diversity in personalized news recommender systems is often defined as dissimilarity, and operationalized based on topic diversity (e.g., corona versus farmers strike). Diversity in news media, however, is understood as multiperspectivity (e.g., different opinions on corona measures), and arguably a key responsibility of the press in a democratic society. While viewpoint diversity is often considered synonymous with source diversity in communication science domain, in this paper,we take a computational view.We operationalize the notion of framing, adopted from communication science. We apply this notion to a re-ranking of topic-relevant recommended lists, to form the basis of a novel viewpoint diversification method. Our offline evaluation indicates that the proposed method is capable of enhancing the viewpoint diversity of recommendation lists according to a diversity metric from literature. In an online study, on the Blendle platform, a Dutch news aggregator, with more than 2000 users, we found that users are willing to consume viewpoint diverse news recommendations.We also found that presentation characteristics significantly influence the reading behaviour of diverse recommendations. These results suggest that future research on presentation aspects of recommendations can be just as important as novel viewpoint diversification methods to truly achieve multiperspectivity in online news environments.