Publication | Open Access
Instant foodie
10
Citations
41
References
2013
Year
Unknown Venue
Customer SatisfactionCustomer ReviewEngineeringGroup RecommendersJournalismInteractive MarketingManagementConsumer ResearchRate ItemsLarge VolumeUser FeedbackCollaborative FilteringCold-start ProblemContent AnalysisMarketingStatisticsSurvey MethodologyConsumer Review Sites
Consumer review sites and recommender systems typically rely on a large volume of user-contributed ratings, which makes rating acquisition an essential component in the design of such systems. User ratings are then summarized to provide an aggregate score representing a popular evaluation of an item. An inherent problem in such summarization is potential bias due to raters self-selection and heterogeneity in terms of experience, tastes and rating scale interpretation. There are two major approaches to collecting ratings, which have different advantages and disadvantages. One is to allow a large number of volunteers to choose and rate items directly (a method employed by e.g. Yelp and Google Places). Alternatively, a panel of raters may be maintained and invited to rate a predefined set of items at regular intervals (such as in Zagat Survey). The latter approach arguably results in more consistent reviews and reduced selection bias, however, at the expense of much smaller coverage (fewer rated items).
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