What's in a user? Towards personalising transparency for music recommender interfaces

M Millecamp, NN Htun, C Conati… - Proceedings of the 28th …, 2020 - dl.acm.org
Proceedings of the 28th ACM Conference on User Modeling, Adaptation and …, 2020dl.acm.org
We have become increasingly reliant on recommender systems to help us make decisions
in our daily live. As such, it is becoming essential to explain to users how these systems
reason to enable them to correct system assumptions and to trust the system. The
advantages of explaining the recommendation process has been shown by a vast amount of
research. Additionally, previous studies showed that personality affects users' attitudes,
tastes and information processing. However, it is still unclear whether personality has an …
We have become increasingly reliant on recommender systems to help us make decisions in our daily live. As such, it is becoming essential to explain to users how these systems reason to enable them to correct system assumptions and to trust the system. The advantages of explaining the recommendation process has been shown by a vast amount of research. Additionally, previous studies showed that personality affects users' attitudes, tastes and information processing. However, it is still unclear whether personality has an impact on the way users process and perceive explanations. In this paper, we report the results of a study that investigated differences between personal characteristics of the perception and the gaze pattern of a music recommender interface in the presence and absence of explanations. We investigated the differences between Need For Cognition, Musical Sophistication and the Big Five personality traits. Results show empirical evidence of the differences between Musical Sophistication and Openness on both perception and gaze pattern. We found that users with a high Musical Sophistication and a low Openness score benefit the most from explanations.
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