With Friends Like These, Who Needs Explanations? Evaluating User Understanding of Group Recommendations
Cedric Waterschoot, Raciel Yera Toledo, Nava Tintarev, Francesco, Barile

TL;DR
This study investigates how different explanation types and aggregation strategies in group recommender systems affect user understanding, revealing that explanation detail has limited impact while aggregation choice significantly influences comprehension.
Contribution
The paper provides empirical evidence that explanation modality has minimal effect on understanding, whereas aggregation strategy choice significantly impacts user comprehension in GRS.
Findings
Detailed explanations do not improve understanding.
Aggregation strategy significantly affects user understanding.
Task-specific analysis offers better insights into user comprehension.
Abstract
Group Recommender Systems (GRS) employing social choice-based aggregation strategies have previously been explored in terms of perceived consensus, fairness, and satisfaction. At the same time, the impact of textual explanations has been examined, but the results suggest a low effectiveness of these explanations. However, user understanding remains fairly unexplored, even if it can contribute positively to transparent GRS. This is particularly interesting to study in more complex or potentially unfair scenarios when user preferences diverge, such as in a minority scenario (where group members have similar preferences, except for a single member in a minority position). In this paper, we analyzed the impact of different types of explanations on user understanding of group recommendations. We present a randomized controlled trial (n = 271) using two between-subject factors: (i) the…
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