Conference
Electronic Commerce
About: Electronic Commerce is an academic conference. The conference publishes majorly in the area(s): Common value auction & Nash equilibrium. Over the lifetime, 1562 publications have been published by the conference receiving 55777 citations.
Topics: Common value auction, Nash equilibrium, Computer science, Combinatorial auction, Auction theory
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
17 Oct 2000
TL;DR: This paper investigates several te hniques for analyzing large-s ale pur hase and preferen e data for the purpose of producing useful re ommendations to ustomers and devise and apply their ombinations on the authors' data sets to ompare for re Ommendation quality and performan e.
Abstract: Re ommender systems apply statisti al and knowledge disovery te hniques to the problem of making produ t re ommendations during a live ustomer intera tion and they are a hieving widespread su ess in E-Commer e nowadays. In this paper, we investigate several te hniques for analyzing large-s ale pur hase and preferen e data for the purpose of produ ing useful re ommendations to ustomers. In parti ular, we apply a olle tion of algorithms su h as traditional data mining, nearest-neighbor ollaborative ltering, and dimensionality redu tion on two di erent data sets. The rst data set was derived from the web-pur hasing transa tion of a large Eommer e ompany whereas the se ond data set was olle ted from MovieLens movie re ommendation site. For the experimental purpose, we divide the re ommendation generation pro ess into three sub pro esses{ representation of input data, neighborhood formation, and re ommendation generation. We devise di erent te hniques for di erent sub pro esses and apply their ombinations on our data sets to ompare for re ommendation quality and performan e.
2,090 citations
1 Nov 1999
TL;DR: An explanation of howRecommender systems help E-commerce sites increase sales, and a taxonomy of recommender systems, including the interfaces they present to customers, the technologies used to create the recommendations, and the inputs they need from customers.
Abstract: Recommender systems are changing from novelties used by a few E-commerce sites, to serious business tools that are re-shaping the world of E-commerce. Many of the largest commerce Web sites are already using recommender systems to help their customers find products to purchase. A recommender system learns from a customer and recommends products that she will find most valuable from among the available products. In this paper we present an explanation of how recommender systems help E-commerce sites increase sales, and analyze six sites that use recommender systems including several sites that use more than one recommender system. Based on the examples, we create a taxonomy of recommender systems, including the interfaces they present to customers, the technologies used to create the recommendations, and the inputs they need from customers. We conclude with ideas for new applications of recommender systems to E-commerce.
1,835 citations
1 Nov 1999
TL;DR: An architecture for executing protocols for auctions and, more generally, mechanism design is suggested to preserve the privacy of the inputs of the participants while maintaining communication and computationaliency.
Abstract: We suggest an architecture for executing protocols for auctions and, more generally, mechanism design. Our goal is to preserve the privacy of the inputs of the participants (so that no nonessential information about them is divulged, even a posteriori) while maintaining communication and computational e ciency. We achieve this goal by adding another party the auction issuer that generates the programs for computing the auctions but does not take an active part in the protocol. The auction issuer is not a trusted party, but is assumed not to collude with the auctioneer. In the case of auctions, barring collusion between the auctioneer and the auction issuer, neither party gains any information about the bids, even after the auction is over. Moreover, bidders can verify that the auction was performed correctly. The protocols do not require any communication between the bidders and the auction issuer and the computational e ciency is very reasonable. This architecture can be used to implement any mechanism design where the important factor is the complexity of the decision procedure.
903 citations
17 Oct 2000
TL;DR: A set of mechanisms are proposed, which eliminate, or significantly reduce the negative effects of such fraudulent behavior, and can be easily integrated into existing online reputation systems in order to safeguard their reliability in the presence of potentially deceitful buyers and sellers.
Abstract: reporting systems have emerged as an important risk management mechanism in online trading communities. However, the predictive value of these systems can be compromised in situations where conspiring buyers intentionally give unfair ratings to sellers or, where sellers discriminate on the quality of service they provide to different buyers. This paper proposes and evaluates a set of mechanisms, which eliminate, or significantly reduce the negative effects of such fraudulent behavior. The proposed mechanisms can be easily integrated into existing online reputation systems in order to safeguard their reliability in the presence of potentially deceitful buyers and sellers.
766 citations
17 May 2004
TL;DR: In the presence of indivisibilities, it is shown that there exist allocations in which the envy is bounded by the maximum marginal utility, and an algorithm for computing such allocations is presented.
Abstract: We study the problem of fairly allocating a set of indivisible goods to a set of people from an algorithmic perspective. fair division has been a central topic in the economic literature and several concepts of fairness have been suggested. The criterion that we focus on is envy-freeness. In our model, a monotone utility function is associated with every player specifying the value of each subset of the goods for the player. An allocation is envy-free if every player prefers her own share than the share of any other player. When the goods are divisible, envy-free allocations always exist. In the presence of indivisibilities, we show that there exist allocations in which the envy is bounded by the maximum marginal utility, and present a simple algorithm for computing such allocations. We then look at the optimization problem of finding an allocation with minimum possible envy. In the general case the problem is not solvable or approximable in polynomial time unless P = NP. We consider natural special cases (e.g.additive utilities) which are closely related to a class of job scheduling problems. Approximation algorithms as well as inapproximability results are obtained. Finally we investigate the problem of designing truthful mechanisms for producing allocations with bounded envy.
726 citations
Performance Metrics
| Year | Papers |
|---|---|
| 2021 | 69 |
| 2020 | 106 |
| 2019 | 48 |
| 2018 | 72 |
| 2017 | 85 |
| 2016 | 66 |