©2005-2006 MusicStrands, Inc. A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material that is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office patent file or records, but otherwise reserves all copyright rights whatsoever. 37 CFR §1.71(d).
This invention relates generally to systems and methods for recommending media items to a user in a personalized manner. It particularly relates to “recommender” computer software systems for media items which are grouped by end users to define mediasets.
New technologies combining digital media item players with dedicated software, together with new media distribution channels through computer networks (e.g., the Internet) are quickly changing the way people organize and play media items. As a direct consequence of such evolution in the media industry, users are faced with a huge volume of available choices that clearly overwhelm them when choosing what item to play in a certain moment.
This overwhelming effect is apparent in the music arena, where people are faced with the problem of selecting music from very large collections of songs. However, in the future, we might detect similar effects in other domains such as music videos, movies, news items, etc.
In general, our invention is applicable to any kind of media item that can be grouped by users to define mediasets. For example, in the music domain, these mediasets are called playlists. Users put songs together in playlists to overcome the problem of being overwhelmed when choosing a song from a large collection, or just to enjoy a set of songs in particular situations. For example, one might be interested in having a playlist for running, another for cooking, etc.
Different approaches can be adopted to help users choose the right options with personalized recommendations. One kind of approach is about using human expertise to classify the media items and then use these classifications to infer recommendations to users based on an input mediaset. For instance, if in the input mediaset the item x appears and x belongs to the same classification as y, then a system could recommend item y based on the fact that both items are classified in a similar cluster. However, this approach requires an incredibly huge amount of human work and expertise. Another approach is to analyze the data of the items (audio signal for songs, video signal for video, etc) and then try to match users preferences with the extracted analysis. This class of approaches is yet to be shown effective from a technical point of view.
Hosken (U.S. Pat. No. 6,438,579) describes a system and method for recommending media items responsive to query media items based on the explicit and implicit user characterizations of the content of the media items. Dunning, et. al. (U.S. Patent Application Pubs 2002/0082901 and 2003/0229537) disclose a system and method for discovering relationships between media items based on explicit and implicit user associations between said items. The present invention differs from Hosken and Dunning, et. al. in that it provides an automatic way to discover relationships between media items without requiring any user rating or any other knowledge from the user.
Lazarus et. al. (U.S. Pat. No. 6,134,532) describe a system and method for providing individually targeted advertising items to users based on observations of user behavior as quantified by representations for important content words in text-bearing materials accessed by a user. Advertising items responsive to the observed behavior of a user are identified by explicitly characterizing content words in the advertisement and by further characterizing candidate responsive items selected in this manner based on observations of user responses to them. Behrens et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 6,615,208) describe a method for associating textual materials similar to that of Lazarus et. al. for recommending items for purchase to a user based on the observed purchasing behavior of the user. The present invention differs from Lazarus et. al. and Behrens et. al. in that it is not based on user behavior other than how users in general associate items to form mediasets. Furthermore, Lazarus et al. and Behrens et. al. use standard methods for analyzing textual materials and the associated vector-space techniques as the basis for quantifying associations between textual representations of user behavior and textual content of advertising items while the present invention uses novel variants of associational methods for media items as the basis for associating media items.
Aggarwal and Yu (U.S. Pat. No. 6,487,539) describe a system for providing product recommendations to users based on extracting characterizations of products from textual descriptive materials about product features. Users are clustered with others users based on observed purchasing behaviors and the extracted descriptions of products purchased by a cluster of users are matched to extracted descriptions of other products and most similar products recommended to a user that is associated with that cluster of users. The present invention differs from Aggarwal and Yu in that the associations among media items are not based on characterizations of the items themselves, but rather on how they are grouped together.
Robinson (U.S. Pat. No. 5,918,014) describes a system and a process for presenting users of the World Wide Web with targeted advertising. Users are clustered based on observed web browsing of sites and purchasing activities while advertisements of probable interest to the users in a cluster are identified by presenting ads to users identified with the cluster and observing the interest of users in the advertisement as expressed by exploration of the ad and purchasing activity. Ads are selected for presentation to a specific user by first associating the user with an identified community, and then selecting from the ads associated with that community those, which conform more closely to the specific characteristics of the user, utilized to associate the user with the community. The present invention differs from Robinson in that media items are not identified for potential presentation based on the acceptance of the media item in response to random presentation to a group of users representative of the user, media items for presentation are instead affirmatively identified by the media items they contain.
This invention addresses the problem of assisting users in building their mediasets by recommending media items that go well together with an initial (or input) mediaset. The recommendation is computed using metrics among the media items of a knowledge base of the system. This knowledge base comprises collections of mediasets from a community of users. (As explained below, a mediaset is not a collection of media items or content. Rather, it is a list of such items, and may include various metadata.) Preferably, the methods of the present invention are implemented in computer software.
In commercial applications, the invention can be deployed in various ways. Recommender services can be provided, for example, to remote users of client computing machines via a network of almost any kind, wired or wireless. Here we use “computing machines” to include traditional computers, as well as cell phones, PDA's, portable music players etc. The knowledge base of the system, a database, can be local or remote from the user. It may be at one location or server, or distributed in various ways.
The invention in one aspect embodies a system for identifying a set of media items in response to an input set of media items. The system requires a knowledge base consisting of a collection of mediasets. Mediasets are sets of media items, which are naturally grouped by users. They reflect the users subjective judgments and preferences. The mediasets of the knowledge base define metrics among items. Such metrics indicate the extent of correlation among media items in the mediasets of the knowledge base.
Various different metrics between and among media items can be generated from the knowledge base of mediasets. Such metrics can include but are not limited to the follow examples:
Such metrics can be represented in an explicit form that directly associates media items with other media items. For each media item of the input set, the system retrieves n media items with highest metrics. These media items are called candidates. Then, the recommended set of media items is a subset of the candidates that maximize an optimization criterion. Such criterion can be simply defined using the metrics of the knowledge base of the system. Furthermore, such criterion can also include filters including but not limited to:
Additional aspects and advantages will be apparent from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments, which proceeds with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Reference is now made to the figures in which like reference numerals refer to like elements. For clarity, the first digit of a reference numeral indicates the figure number in which the corresponding element is first used.
In the following description, certain specific details of programming, software modules, user selections, network transactions, database queries, database structures, etc. are omitted to avoid obscuring the invention. Those of ordinary skill in computer sciences will comprehend many ways to implement the invention in various embodiments, the details of which can be determined using known technologies.
Furthermore, the described features, structures, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more embodiments. In general, the methodologies of the present invention are advantageously carried out using one or more digital processors, for example the types of microprocessors that are commonly found in servers, PC's, laptops, PDA's and all manner of desktop or portable electronic appliances.
The system preferably comprises or has access to a knowledge base which is a collection of mediasets. A mediaset is a list of media items that a user has grouped together. A media item can be almost any kind of content; audio, video, multi-media, etc., for example a song, a book, a newspaper or magazine article, a movie, a piece of a radio program, etc. Media items might also be artists or albums. If a mediaset is composed of a single type of media items it is called a homogeneous mediaset, otherwise it is called a heterogeneous mediaset. A mediaset can be ordered or unordered. An ordered mediaset implies a certain order with respect to the sequence in which the items are used1 by the user. Note again that a mediaset, in a preferred embodiment, is a list of media items, i.e. meta data, rather than the actual content of the media items. In other embodiments, the content itself may be included. Preferably, a knowledge base is stored in a machine-readable digital storage system. It can employ well-known database technologies for establishing, maintaining and querying the database. 1 Depending on the nature of the item, it will be played, viewed, read, etc.
In general, mediasets are based on the assumption that users group media items together following some logic or reasoning, which may be purely subjective, or not. For example, in the music domain, a user may be selecting a set of songs for driving, hence that is a homogeneous mediaset of songs. In this invention, we also consider other kinds of media items such as books, movies, newspapers, and so on. For example, if we consider books, a user may have a list of books for the summer, a list of books for bus riding, and another list of books for the weekends. A user may be interested in expressing a heterogeneous mediaset with a mix of books and music, expressing (impliedly) that the listed music goes well with certain books.
A set of media items is not considered the same as a mediaset. The difference is mainly about the intention of the user in grouping the items together. In the case of a mediaset the user is expressing that the items in the mediaset go together well, in some sense, according to her personal preferences. A common example of a music mediaset is a playlist. On the other hand, a set of media items does not express necessarily the preferences of a user. We use the term set of media items to refer to the input of the system of the invention as well as to the output of the system.
A metric M between a pair of media items i and j for a given knowledge base k expresses some degree of relation between i and j with respect to k. A metric may be expressed as a “distance,” where smaller distance values (proximity) represent stronger association values, or as a similarity, where larger similarity values represent stronger association values. These are functionally equivalent, but the mathematics are complementary. The most immediate metric is the co-concurrency (i, j, k) that indicates how many times item i and item j appear together in any of the mediasets of k. The metric pre-concurrency (i, j, k) indicates how many times item i and item j appear together but i before j in any of the mediasets of k. The metric post-concurrency (i, j, k) indicates how many times item i and item j appear together but only i after j in any of the mediasets of k. The previous defined metrics can also be applied to considering the immediate sequence of i and j. So, the system might be considering co/pre/post-concurrencies metrics but only if items i and j are consecutive in the mediasets (i.e., the mediasets are ordered). Other metrics can be considered and also new ones can be defined by combining the previous ones.
A metric may be computed based on any of the above metrics and applying transitivity. For instance, consider co-concurrency between item i and j, co(i,j), and between j and k, co(j,k), and consider that co(i,k)=0. We could create another metric to include transitivity, for example d(i,k)=1/co(i,j)+1/co(j,k). These type of transitivity metrics may be efficiently computed using standard branch and bound search algorithms. This metric reveals an association between items i and k notwithstanding that i and k do not appear within any one mediaset in K.
A matrix representation of metric M, for a given knowledge base K can be defined as a bidimensional matrix where the element M(i, j) is the value of the metric between the media item i and media item j.
A graph representation for a given knowledge base k, is a graph where nodes represent media items, and edges are between pairs of media items. Pairs of media items i, j are linked by labeled directed edges, where the label indicates the value of the similarity or distance metric M(i,j) for the edge with head media item i and tail media item j.
One embodiment of the invention is illustrated by the flow diagram shown in
As a preliminary matter, in a presently preferred embodiment, a pre-processing step is carried out to analyze the contents of an existing knowledge base. This can be done in advance of receiving any input items. As noted above, the knowledge base comprises an existing collection of mediasets. This is illustrated in
Pre-processing analysis of a knowledge base can be conducted for any selected metric. In general, the metrics reflect and indeed quantify the association between pairs of media items in a given knowledge base. The process is described by way of example using the co-concurrency metric mentioned earlier. For each item in a mediaset, the process identifies every other item in the same mediaset, thereby defining all of the pairs of items in that mediaset. For example, in
Next, for each pair of media items, a co-concurrency metric is incremented for each additional occurrence of the same pair of items in the same knowledge base. For example, if a pair of media items, say the song “Uptown Girl” by Billy Joel and “Hallelujah” by Jeff Buckley, appear together in 42 different mediasets in the knowledge base (not necessarily adjacent one another), then the co-concurrency metric might be 42 (or some other figure depending on the scaling selected, normalization, etc. In some embodiments, this figure or co-concurrency “weight” may be normalized to a number between zero and one.
Referring now to
Now we assume an input set of media items is received. Referring again to process step 302, a collection of “candidate media items” most similar to the input media items is generated, based on a metric matrix like matrix 100 of
Process 303 receives the candidate set from process 302 which contains at the most m*n media items. This component selects p elements from the m*n items of the candidate set. This selection can be done according to various criteria. For example, the system may consider that the candidates should be selected according to the media item distribution that generated the candidate set. This distribution policy may be used to avoid having many candidates coming from very few media items. Also, the system may consider the popularity of the media items in the candidate set. The popularity of a media item with respect to a knowledge base indicates the frequency of such media item in the mediasets of the knowledge base.
Finally, from the second collection of [p] media items, a third and final output set 305 of some specified number of media items is selected that satisfy any additional desired external constraints by a filter process 304. For instance, this step could ensure that the final set of media items is balanced with respect to the metrics among the media sets of the final set. For example, the system may maximize the sum of the metrics among each pair of media items in the resulting set. Sometimes, the system may be using optimization techniques when computation would otherwise be too expensive. Filtering criteria such as personalization or other preferences expressed by the user may also be considered in this step. In some applications, because of some possible computational constraints, these filtering steps may be done in the process 303 instead of 304. Filtering in other embodiments might include genre, decade or year of creation, vendor, etc. Also, filtering can be used to demote, rather then remove a candidate output item.
In another embodiment or aspect of the invention, explicit associations including similarity values between a subset of the full set of media items known to the system, as shown in graph form in
M(i,j)=min{M(i,i+1),M(i,i+2),M(i+k,j)}
or
M(i,j)=M(i,i+1)*M(i,i+2)* . . . *M(i+k,j)
Other methods for computing a similarity value M(i,j) for the path between a first media item i and a second, non-adjacent media item j where the edges are labeled with the sequence of similarity values M(i, i+1), M(i+1, i+2), M(i+k, j) can be used. From the user standpoint, this corresponds to determining an association metric for a pair of items that do not appear within the same mediaset.
Many modifications and other embodiments of the invention will come to mind to one skilled in the art to which this invention pertains having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed and that modifications and other embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims. For example, one of ordinary skill in the art will understand that, while the above system and methods were described as embodied in a media recommendation system, it should be understood that the inventive system could be used in any system for recommending other items that can be grouped by users following some criterion. Although specific terms are employed herein, there are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for purposes of limitation.
It will be obvious to those having skill in the art that many changes may be made to the details of the above-described embodiments without departing from the underlying principles of the invention. The scope of the present invention should, therefore, be determined only by the following claims.
This application is a Divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/685,639, filed on Jan. 11, 2010, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,312,017, which is a Continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/346,818, filed Feb. 3, 2006, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,734,569, which also claims benefit from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/649,987 filed Feb. 3, 2005, each of which are incorporated herein in their entireties by this reference.
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Parent | 12685639 | Jan 2010 | US |
Child | 13674815 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11349818 | Feb 2006 | US |
Child | 12685639 | US |