Planning Before Picking: When Slate Recommendation Learns to Think
A list of individually excellent items can still be a terrible list. Ask anyone who has attended a conference with five brilliant speakers, no agenda, and three consecutive sessions on the same topic. Recommendation systems have the same problem. A conventional recommender can assign highly accurate scores to individual videos, products, or articles, then still assemble a repetitive, badly ordered, or strangely balanced feed. Each item wins its private competition. The user receives the collective consequences. ...