Web Usage Mining Approaches for Web Page Recommendation

Author(s):  
H. Inbarani ◽  
K. Thangavel

The technology behind personalization or Web page recommendation has undergone tremendous changes, and several Web-based personalization systems have been proposed in recent years. The main goal of Web personalization is to dynamically recommend Web pages based on online behavior of users. Although personalization can be accomplished in numerous ways, most Web personalization techniques fall into four major categories: decision rule-based filtering, content-based filtering, and collaborative filtering and Web usage mining. Decision rule-based filtering reviews users to obtain user demographics or static profiles, and then lets Web sites manually specify rules based on them. It delivers the appropriate content to a particular user based on the rules. However, it is not particularly useful because it depends on users knowing in advance the content that interests them. Content-based filtering relies on items being similar to what a user has liked previously. Collaborative filtering, also called social or group filtering, is the most successful personalization technology to date. Most successful recommender systems on the Web typically use explicit user ratings of products or preferences to sort user profile information into peer groups. It then tells users what products they might want to buy by combining their personal preferences with those of like-minded individuals. However, collaborative filtering has limited use for a new product that no one has seen or rated, and content-based filtering to obtain user profiles might miss novel or surprising information. Additionally, traditional Web personalization techniques, including collaborative or content-based filtering, have other problems, such as reliance on subject user ratings and static profiles or the inability to capture richer semantic relationships among Web objects. To overcome these shortcomings, the new Web personalization tool, nonintrusive personalization, attempts to increasingly incorporate Web usage mining techniques. Web usage mining can help improve the scalability, accuracy, and flexibility of recommender systems. Thus, Web usage mining can reduce the need for obtaining subjective user ratings or registration-based personal preferences. This chapter provides a survey of Web usage mining approaches.

The emerging web page development requires semantic applications with customized administrations. The proposed methodology presents a customized suggestion framework, which makes utilization of item representations and also client profiles created based on ontology. The domain ontology helps the recommender to improve the personalization: from one perspective, client’s interests are displayed in an increasingly powerful and precise route by applying an area based derivative technique; on the other side, the stemmer algorithm derived content- based filtering approach, gives an evaluation of resemblance among a thing and a client, upgraded by applying a semantic likeliness strategy. Recommender frameworks and web personalize were assumed by Web usage mining as a critical job. The proposed strategy is s successful framework dependent on ontology and web usage mining. Extricating highlights from web reports and building applicable ideas is the initial step of the methodology. At that point manufacture metaphysics for the site exploit the ideas and huge terms separated from reports. As per the semantic similitude of web archives to bunch them into various semantic topics, the distinctive subjects suggest diverse inclinations. The proposed methodology incorporates semantic information into Web Usage Mining and personalization process


Author(s):  
Laurent Candillier ◽  
Kris Jack ◽  
Françoise Fessant ◽  
Frank Meyer

The aim of Recommender Systems is to help users to find items that they should appreciate from huge catalogues. In that field, collaborative filtering approaches can be distinguished from content-based ones. The former is based on a set of user ratings on items, while the latter uses item content descriptions and user thematic profiles. While collaborative filtering systems often result in better predictive performance, content-based filtering offers solutions to the limitations of collaborative filtering, as well as a natural way to interact with users. These complementary approaches thus motivate the design of hybrid systems. In this chapter, the main algorithmic methods used for recommender systems are presented in a state of the art. The evaluation of recommender systems is currently an important issue. The authors focus on two kinds of evaluations. The first one concerns the performance accuracy: several approaches are compared through experiments on two real movies rating datasets MovieLens and Netflix. The second concerns user satisfaction and for this a hybrid system is implemented and tested with real users.


2006 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miha Grcar ◽  
Dunja Mladenic ◽  
Marko Grobelnik

This paper addresses a problem of personalized information delivery related to the Web, that is based on user profiling. Different approaches to user profiling have been developed. When the user profiling is used for personalization in the context of Web, we can talk about Web personalization. There are three main groups of approaches: content-based filtering collaborative filtering and Web usage mining. We provide an overview of them including recent research results in the area with especial emphases on user profiling in the perspective of Semantic Web applications.


Author(s):  
Sunny Sharma ◽  
Manisha Malhotra

Web usage mining is the use of data mining techniques to analyze user behavior in order to better serve the needs of the user. This process of personalization uses a set of techniques and methods for discovering the linking structure of information on the web. The goal of web personalization is to improve the user experience by mining the meaningful information and presented the retrieved information in a way the user intends. The arrival of big data instigated novel issues to the personalization community. This chapter provides an overview of personalization, big data, and identifies challenges related to web personalization with respect to big data. It also presents some approaches and models to fill the gap between big data and web personalization. Further, this research brings additional opportunities to web personalization from the perspective of big data.


Author(s):  
P. K. Nizar Banu ◽  
H. Inbarani

As websites increase in complexity, locating needed information becomes a difficult task. Such difficulty is often related to the websites’ design but also ineffective and inefficient navigation processes. Research in web mining addresses this problem by applying techniques from data mining and machine learning to web data and documents. In this study, the authors examine web usage mining, applying data mining techniques to web server logs. Web usage mining has gained much attention as a potential approach to fulfill the requirement of web personalization. In this paper, the authors propose K-means biclustering, rough biclustering and fuzzy biclustering approaches to disclose the duality between users and pages by grouping them in both dimensions simultaneously. The simultaneous clustering of users and pages discovers biclusters that correspond to groups of users that exhibit highly correlated ratings on groups of pages. The results indicate that the fuzzy C-means biclustering algorithm best and is able to detect partial matching of preferences.


Author(s):  
Paolo Giudici ◽  
Paola Cerchiello

The aim of this contribution is to show how the information, concerning the order in which the pages of a Web site are visited, can be profitably used to predict the visit behaviour at the site. Usually every click corresponds to the visualization of a Web page. Thus, a Web clickstream defines the sequence of the Web pages requested by a user. Such a sequence identifies a user session.


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