| Marc | 90 Posts | |
| wrote on 03.03.13 at 07:26 | | Abstract:
In the Internet music scene, where recommendation technology is key for navigating huge collections, large market players enjoy a considerable advantage. Accessing a wider pool of user feedback leads to an increasingly more accurate analysis of user tastes, effectively creating a "rich get richer" effect. This work aims at significantly lowering the entry barrier for creating music recommenders, through a paradigm coupling a public data source and a new collaborative filtering (CF) model. We claim that Internet radio stations form a readily available resource of abundant fresh human signals on music through their playlists, which are essentially cohesive sets of related tracks. In a way, our models rely on the knowledge of a diverse group of experts in lieu of the commonly used wisdom of crowds. Over several weeks, we aggregated publicly available playlists of thousands of Internet radio stations, resulting in a dataset encompassing millions of plays, and hundreds of thousands of tracks and artists. This provides the large scale ground data necessary to mitigate the cold start problem of new items at both mature and emerging services. Furthermore, we developed a new probabilistic CF model, tailored to the Internet radio resource. The success of the model was empirically validated on the collected dataset. Moreover, we tested the model at a cross-source transfer learning manner – the same model trained on the Internet radio data was used to predict behavior of Yahoo! Music users. This demonstrates the ability to tap the Internet radio signals in other music recommendation setups. Based on encouraging empirical results, our hope is that the proposed paradigm will make quality music recommendation accessible to all interested parties in the community. Source: http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2187838
Very interesting article, unfortunately the abstract only is available. This has gotten me started, how cool and how possible would be to use the power of internet radio to create music recommendations for your own music library? Some thoughts on the matter: -> If a log is kept of all played tracks by any given radio, relationships can be established given whioch track was played before and after which track. Let's say that after two days a radio played track A 4 times before track B and 2 times before track D and C. What are your thoughts? |
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| Kaefer | 179 Posts | |
| wrote on 03.03.13 at 10:54 | | Hi! I think most internet radio stations use random playback, so I don't think you will find a special statistical relationship between 2 successively played songs. It is more about the whole playlist which represents a specific genre. Do you plan to develop a software program?
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| | | | Viele Grüße, Käfer |
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| Marc | 90 Posts | |
| wrote on 03.03.13 at 17:05 | | Ahh you are right. Thanks Kaefer for making the point. I'm not a developer, so the aim here was/is to discuss whats presented in the article; how good data gathered from internet radios would make for music recommendatios. |
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| Marc | 90 Posts | |
| wrote on 03.03.13 at 17:05 last edited by Marc on 03.03.13 at 17:10 | | (Duplicated) - I'd rather have this one deleted… :) |
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| alex | 2549 Posts | |
| wrote on 05.03.13 at 22:18 | | I think it will be possible because much data about streams is collected. But it's hard to get it working without "false positives" I think. Anyway, it would be a nice experiment |
| | | | LG/Best regards, Alex
"Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed. Everything else is public relations." - George Orwell
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| alex | 2549 Posts | |
| wrote on 07.03.13 at 21:55 | | I bought the article, read it and only understand it partially. I think I have to study mathematics… |
| | | | LG/Best regards, Alex
"Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed. Everything else is public relations." - George Orwell
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| Marc | 90 Posts | |
| wrote on 08.03.13 at 09:20 | | Ahh same here, I find it very interesting but I will need some assitance to understand the model. I don't know but, would the publishers be kind enough to share the code used for the model analysis? |
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| Marc | 90 Posts | |
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| alex | 2549 Posts | |
| wrote on 03.04.13 at 01:10 | | If you get information I would take a look into that in the future. I'm sorry but I cannot tell if you need the full model or not. AFAIR the document describes simple models and describes the "full" model at the end… I really cannot help out here, the only thing I could do is to give you collected data (SQL dump). |
| | | | LG/Best regards, Alex
"Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed. Everything else is public relations." - George Orwell
D1734FA178BF7D5AE50CB1AD54442494 |
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