How opinions are received by online communities: A case study on Amazon.com helpfulness votes
Proceedings of WWW, pp. 141--150, 2009 There are many on-line settings in which users publicly express opinions. A number of these offer mechanisms for other users to evaluate these opinions; a canonical example is Amazon.com, where reviews come with annotations like "26 of 32 people found the...
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext bestellen |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | Proceedings of WWW, pp. 141--150, 2009 There are many on-line settings in which users publicly express opinions. A
number of these offer mechanisms for other users to evaluate these opinions; a
canonical example is Amazon.com, where reviews come with annotations like "26
of 32 people found the following review helpful." Opinion evaluation appears in
many off-line settings as well, including market research and political
campaigns. Reasoning about the evaluation of an opinion is fundamentally
different from reasoning about the opinion itself: rather than asking, "What
did Y think of X?", we are asking, "What did Z think of Y's opinion of X?" Here
we develop a framework for analyzing and modeling opinion evaluation, using a
large-scale collection of Amazon book reviews as a dataset. We find that the
perceived helpfulness of a review depends not just on its content but also but
also in subtle ways on how the expressed evaluation relates to other
evaluations of the same product. As part of our approach, we develop novel
methods that take advantage of the phenomenon of review "plagiarism" to control
for the effects of text in opinion evaluation, and we provide a simple and
natural mathematical model consistent with our findings. Our analysis also
allows us to distinguish among the predictions of competing theories from
sociology and social psychology, and to discover unexpected differences in the
collective opinion-evaluation behavior of user populations from different
countries. |
---|---|
DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.0906.3741 |