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User recommendation in healthcare social media by assessing user similarity in heterogeneous network
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

User recommendation in healthcare social media by assessing user similarity in heterogeneous network

Ling Jiang and Christopher C Yang
Artificial intelligence in medicine, v 81
Sep 2017
PMID: 28325605
url
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.artmed.2017.03.002View
Accepted (AM)Open Access (Publisher-Specific) Open

Abstract

Social Media Artificial Intelligence Humans Consumer Health Informatics - methods Social Support Health Information Systems Medical Informatics - methods Data Mining - methods Emotions Databases, Factual
The rapid growth of online health social websites has captured a vast amount of healthcare information and made the information easy to access for health consumers. E-patients often use these social websites for informational and emotional support. However, health consumers could be easily overwhelmed by the overloaded information. Healthcare information searching can be very difficult for consumers, not to mention most of them are not skilled information searcher. In this work, we investigate the approaches for measuring user similarity in online health social websites. By recommending similar users to consumers, we can help them to seek informational and emotional support in a more efficient way. We propose to represent the healthcare social media data as a heterogeneous healthcare information network and introduce the local and global structural approaches for measuring user similarity in a heterogeneous network. We compare the proposed structural approaches with the content-based approach. Experiments were conducted on a dataset collected from a popular online health social website, and the results showed that content-based approach performed better for inactive users, while structural approaches performed better for active users. Moreover, global structural approach outperformed local structural approach for all user groups. In addition, we conducted experiments on local and global structural approaches using different weight schemas for the edges in the network. Leverage performed the best for both local and global approaches. Finally, we integrated different approaches and demonstrated that hybrid method yielded better performance than the individual approach. The results indicate that content-based methods can effectively capture the similarity of inactive users who usually have focused interests, while structural methods can achieve better performance when rich structural information is available. Local structural approach only considers direct connections between nodes in the network, while global structural approach takes the indirect connections into account. Therefore, the global similarity approach can deal with sparse networks and capture the implicit similarity between two users. Different approaches may capture different aspects of the similarity relationship between two users. When we combine different methods together, we could achieve a better performance than using each individual method.

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53 citations in Scopus

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This publication has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#3 Good Health and Well-Being

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Web of Science research areas
Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence
Engineering, Biomedical
Medical Informatics
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