Abstract
Behavioral targeting plays an important role in social media advertising for capturing users’ preferences of ads. While existing studies of behavioral targeting mainly focus on the user behaviors that have explicit correlations with ads, such as ad clicking and web search, many implicit relationships between users and ads, which reside in a variety of heterogeneous sources in social media platforms, are not utilized to enhance the prediction of users’ preferences of ads.In this paper, we propose a two-pronged approach to behavioral targeting that effectively addresses the above difficulties. First, we model the implicit relationships between users and ads as a heterogeneous information network (HIN), and propose a method that first performs representation learning in the HIN and then uses the learned representations to train a prediction model for boosting the performance of behavioral targeting. Second, we develop a human-in-the-loop framework to address the incompleteness challenge in HIN construction that may result in inferior performance of model prediction. The framework judiciously selects the most beneficial tasks to ask human for completing the HIN and utilizes the results from human to update the representation learning of HIN. We validate the effectiveness of our approach through extensive experiments on real datasets collected from WeChat, the largest social media platform in China. The experimental results show that our approach is effective at constructing a high-quality HIN at a low cost of human involvement, and the HIN can significantly improve the performance of social behavioral targeting.
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