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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MAHOUT-906?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13161594#comment-13161594
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Manuel Blechschmidt commented on MAHOUT-906:
--------------------------------------------

Actually it would be a good idea to implement time based splitting. Normally we 
want a recommender to predict ratings for items that we are going to like in 
the future and this should be the evaluation basis for the recommendations.

In an ecommerce scenario you want the recommender to predict the item that you 
are going to buy next. Therefore you have to hide the newest items.

The university of hildesheim (Steffen Rendle, Christoph Freudenthaler, Lars 
Schmidt-Thieme) wrote a paper in 2010 where they are combining SVD + HMM and 
are able to outperform a standard recommender:
http://www.ismll.uni-hildesheim.de/pub/pdfs/RendleFreudenthaler2010-FPMC.pdf
                
> Allow collaborative filtering evaluators to use custom logic in splitting 
> data set
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: MAHOUT-906
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MAHOUT-906
>             Project: Mahout
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: Collaborative Filtering
>    Affects Versions: 0.5
>            Reporter: Anatoliy Kats
>            Priority: Minor
>              Labels: features
>   Original Estimate: 48h
>  Remaining Estimate: 48h
>
> I want to start a discussion about factoring out the logic used in splitting 
> the data set into training and testing.  Here is how things stand:  There are 
> two independent evaluator based classes:  
> AbstractDifferenceRecommenderEvaluator, splits all the preferences randomly 
> into a training and testing set.  GenericRecommenderIRStatsEvaluator takes 
> one user at a time, removes their top AT preferences, and counts how many of 
> them the system recommends back.
> I have two use cases that both deal with temporal dynamics.  In one case, 
> there may be expired items that can be used for building a training model, 
> but not a test model.  In the other, I may want to simulate the behavior of a 
> real system by building a preference matrix on days 1-k, and testing on the 
> ratings the user generated on the day k+1.  In this case, it's not items, but 
> preferences(user, item, rating triplets) which may belong only to the 
> training set.  Before we discuss appropriate design, are there any other use 
> cases we need to keep in mind?

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