-------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: [AISWorld] CFP: 1st Workshop on Measuring the Quality of Explanations in Recommender Systems @ SIGIR 2022 Date: Tue, 12 Apr 2022 15:39:15 +0200 From: Oana Inel oana.inel@gmail.com To: aisworld@lists.aisnet.org
— Apologies for cross-posting — QUARE 2022: The 1st workshop on Measuring the Quality of Explanations in Recommender Systems, co-located with SIGIR 2022 (https://sigir.org/sigir2022/ https://sigir.org/sigir2022/), July 11-15, 2022, in Madrid, Spain and Online
Workshop website: https://sites.google.com/view/quare-2022/home https://sites.google.com/view/quare-2022/home Location: Hybrid - Madrid, Spain and Online
IMPORTANT DATES: ----------------------------- Paper submission: 3 May 2022 Author notification: 15 May 2022 Final version deadline: 15 June 2022 Workshop date: 15 July 2022
CALL FOR PAPERS: ---------------------------- Recommendations are ubiquitous in many contexts and domains due to a continuously growing adoption of decision-support systems. Explanations may be provided along with recommendations with the reasoning behind suggesting a particular item. However, explanations may also significantly affect a user's decision-making process by serving a number of different goals, such as transparency, persuasiveness, scrutability, among others. While there is a growing body of research studying the effect of explanations, the relationship between their quality and their effect has not been investigated in depth yet. For instance, at an institutional level, organisational values may require a different combination of explanation goals; also, within the same organisation some combinations of goals may be more appropriate for some use cases and less for others. Conversely, end-users of a recommender system may be bearers of different values, and explanations can affect them differently. Therefore, understanding whether explanations are fit for their intended goals is key to subsequently implementing them in a production stage. Furthermore, the lack of established, actionable methodologies to evaluate explanations for recommendations, as well as evaluation datasets, hinders cross-comparison between different explainable recommendations approaches, and is one of the issues hampering widespread adoption of explanations in industry settings.
This workshop aims to extend existing work in the field by bringing together and facilitating the exchange of perspectives and solutions from industry and academia, and aims to bridge the gap between academic design guidelines and the best practices in the industry regarding the implementation and evaluation of explanations in recommender systems, with respect to their goals, impact, potential biases, and informativeness. With this workshop, we provide a platform for discussion among scholars, practitioners, and other interested parties.
TOPICS AND THEMES: -------------------------------- The motivation of the workshop is to promote discussion upon future research and practice directions of evaluating explainable recommendations, by bringing together academic and industry researchers and practitioners in the area. We focus in particular on real-world use cases, diverse organisational values and purposes, and different target users. We encourage submissions that study different explanation goals and combinations of those, how they fit various organisation values and different use cases. Furthermore, we welcome submissions that propose and make available for the community high-quality datasets and benchmarks.
Topics include, but are not limited to:
Evaluation Relevance of explanation goals for different use cases; Soliciting user feedback on explanations; Implicit vs. explicit evaluation of explanations and goals; Reproducible and replicable evaluation methodologies; Online vs. offline evaluations. Personalisation User-modelling for explanation generation; Evaluation approaches for personalised explanations (e.g., content, style); Evaluation approaches for context-aware explanations (e.g., place, time, alone/group setting, exploratory/transaction mode). Presentation Evaluation of different explanation modalities (e.g., text, graphics, audio, hybrid); Evaluation of interactive explanations. Datasets Generation of datasets for evaluation of explanations; Evaluation benchmarks. Values Evaluation of explanations in relation to organisational values; Evaluation of explanations in relation to personal values.
SUBMISSIONS: ---------------------- We welcome three types of submissions: position or perspective papers (up to 4 pages in length, plus unlimited pages for references): original ideas, perspectives, research vision, and open challenges in the area of evaluation approaches for explainable recommender systems; featured papers (title and abstract of the paper, plus the original paper): already published papers or papers summarizing existing publications in leading conferences and high-impact journals that are relevant for the topic of the workshop demonstration papers (up to 2 pages in length, plus unlimited pages for references): original or already published prototypes and operational evaluation approaches in the area of explainable recommender systems.
Page limits include diagrams and appendices. Submissions should be single-blind, written in English, and formatted according to the current ACM two-column conference format. Suitable LaTeX, Word, and Overleaf https://www.overleaf.com/gallery/tagged/acm-official templates are available from the ACM Website https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template (use “sigconf” proceedings template for LaTeX and the Interim Template for Word). Submit papers electronically via EasyChair: https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=quare22 https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=quare22.
All submissions will be peer-reviewed by the program committee and accepted papers will be published on the website of our workshop: https://sites.google.com/view/quare-2022/home https://sites.google.com/view/quare-2022/home. At least one author of each accepted paper is required to register for the workshop and present the work.
ORGANISERS: ---------------------- Alessandro Piscopo, BBC Oana Inel, University of Zurich Sanne Vrijenhoek, University of Amsterdam Martijn Millecamp, AE NV Krisztian Balog, Google, University of Stavanger
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