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Fusion 5.9
    Fusion 5.9

    MethodsRecommendations and boosting

    This topic provides an overview of different methods for generating recommendations and boosts. "Content-based" and "collaborative" recommendations are two broad categories. More specific recommendation methods are also explained.

    Content-based vs collaborative recommendations

    Recommendation methods can be divided into two broad categories: collaborative recommendations and content-based recommendations.

    Collaborative recommendations always require signals. Some also require a job that pre-computes a matrix of values that can be queried. When these values are used for boosting, then certain query pipeline stages are needed as well.

    Method Requires aggregated signals Required job Boosting stage

    Collaborative recommendations

    These methods analyze how users have interacted with documents.

    Content-based recommendations

    These methods analyze the content of documents or queries.

    Managed Fusion recommendation and boosting methods

    This section provides an overview of each method, with links to more detailed topics.

    Collaborative recommendations Content-based recommendations

    When you enable recommendations, this automatically enables the items-for-user and items-for-item recommendation methods. To use additional recommendation methods, you must configure them separately.

    Items-for-item recommendations

    Items-for-item recommendations present items that are similar to a specified item. For example, when the user is viewing a BMX bicycle, Managed Fusion can recommend other BMX bicycles. Similarity can be based on different criteria, such as click patterns, people who bought this also bought that, percentage match of document tags, and so on.

    Items-for-user recommendations

    Items-for-user recommendations use the Recommend items for user query stage to present items that are similar to ones in which the user has previously shown interest, based on the user’s search history, browsing history, purchase history, and so on. This is one type of collaborative recommendation.

    Items-for-query recommendations

    The Items for Query recommender is the primary algorithm that supports recommendations on the search results page.

    Items-for-query recommendations are based on how other users interacted with search results from the same query. This is one type of collaborative recommendation.

    For example, if users have searched for "titanic" in the past and many of them clicked on the search result for the DVD of the movie Titanic (as opposed to books or memorabilia), then this method boosts the DVD item on subsequent searches for "titanic".

    Queries-for-query recommendations

    Queries-for-query recommendations are queries performed by other users who also performed the current query. For example, when a user searches for "madonna", your app may also suggest searches for "evita", "a league of their own", "lady gaga", and so on.

    See Queries for Query for details.

    Boost with signals

    The Boost With Signals query pipeline stage performs automatic boosts based on the contents of the aggregated signals collection. For this type of boosting, signals must be enabled but recommendations need not be.

    See Boost With Signals for details.

    The Trending Recommender job analyzes signals to measure customer engagement over time. Use this job to identify spikes in popularity for specific items or queries, then display those items to your users or analyze the trends for business purposes. You can configure any time window, such as daily, weekly, or monthly.

    See Trending items or queries for details.

    Users-for-item recommendations

    Users-for-item recommendations retrieve the set of users who have interacted with an item, weighted by the number of interactions. This can be useful for community-driven use cases or for marketing campaigns. For example, on your organization’s intranet, clicking a search result could display the item plus a list of colleagues who have interacted with the same item.

    Boost documents

    The Boost Documents query pipeline stage adds boosting parameters to matched documents based on user-defined rules. Boosts are defined with a term value to boost and the boost factor to add. The boosting parameters are added to the bq Solr query parameter.

    See Boost Documents for details.

    Parameterized boosting

    The Parameterized Boosting query pipeline stage reads the boostValues (in List<DocumentResult> format) from the context variable (added by a Rollup Aggregation stage or a JavaScript stage), and adds boosts to the main query using bq or boost based on the stage configuration. The weights for the boost values can also be scaled.

    See Parameterized Boosting for details.

    More like this

    This stage uses the content of the current document to query for similar documents, using Solr’s MoreLikeThis component.

    This stage provides content-based recommendations. For collaborative recommendations, use the Recommend Items for Item stage.

    See Solr MoreLikeThis for details.

    Business rules

    Business rules are manually-created formulas for rewriting queries. This is the most versatile strategy for creating custom query rewrites. It supports a variety of conditions and actions to address a wide range of use cases. When you need a very specific query rewrite, this is the best strategy.

    Business rules are applied in the Apply Rules stage of the query pipeline.

    See Business Rules to learn how to create, edit, and publish business rules. See Query Rewriting for additional query rewriting methods.

    BPR algorithm

    The Bayesian Personalized Ranking (BPR) algorithm is used to configure items-for-item, items-for-user, or user-for-item recommendations. The BPR job generates effective results in a short run time. See the BPR Recommender for more information.