Click Through Rates
Data Skeptic24 Aug 2018

Click Through Rates

A Click Through Rate (CTR) is the proportion of clicks to impressions of some item of content shared online. This terminology is most commonly used in digital advertising but applies just as well to content websites might choose to feature on their homepage or in search results.

A CTR is intuitively appealing as a metric for optimization. After all, if users are disinterested in some content, under normal circumstances, it's reasonable to assume they would ignore the content, rather than clicking on it. On the other hand, the best content is likely to elicit a high CTR as users signal their interest by following the hyperlink.

In the advertising world, a website could charge per impression, per click, or per action. Both impression and action based pricing have asymmetrical results for the publisher and advertiser. However, paying per click (CPC based advertising) seems to strike a nice balance. For this and other numeric reasons, many digital advertising mechanisms (such as Google Adwords) use CPC as the payment mechanism.

When charging per click, an advertising platform will value a high CTR when selecting which ad to show. As we learned in our episode on Goodhart's Law, once a measure is turned into a target, it ceases to be a good measure. While CTR alone does not entirely drive most online advertising algorithms, it does play an important role. Thus, advertisers are incentivized to adopt strategies that maximize CTR.

On the surface, this sounds like a great idea: provide internet users what they are looking for, and be awarded with their attention and lower advertising costs. However, one possible unintended consequence of this type of optimization is the creation of ads which are designed solely to generate clicks, regardless of if the users are happy with the page they visit after clicking a link.

So, at least in part, websites that optimize for higher CTRs are going to favor content that does a good job getting viewers to click it. Getting a user to view a page is not totally synonymous with getting a user to appreciate the content of a page. The gap between the algorithmic goal and the user experience could be one of the factors that has promoted the creation of fake news.

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(601)

Student Spotlight: Aaron Payne, Data Analyst

Student Spotlight: Aaron Payne, Data Analyst

Aaron Payne, an MBA student at Georgia Tech studying business analytics and a Senior Insights Analyst at Chick-fil-A, joins Kyle Polich to talk about turning analytics into decisions that matter. They...

1 Maj 25min

The Future is Agentic in Recommender Systems

The Future is Agentic in Recommender Systems

Kyle Polich sits down with Yashar Deldjoo, research scientist and Associate Professor at the Polytechnic University of Bari, to explore how recommender systems have evolved and why trustworthiness mat...

25 Apr 49min

Book Ratings and Recommendations

Book Ratings and Recommendations

Goodreads star ratings can be misleading as measures of "book quality," and research from Hannes Rosenbusch suggests that for many professionally published books, differences between readers often mat...

27 Mars 39min

Disentanglement and Interpretability in Recommender Systems

Disentanglement and Interpretability in Recommender Systems

Ervin Dervishaj, a PhD student at the University of Copenhagen, discusses his research on disentangled representation learning in recommender systems, finding that while disentanglement strongly corre...

10 Mars 30min

Collective Altruism in Recommender Systems

Collective Altruism in Recommender Systems

Ekaterina (Kat) Fedorova from MIT EECS joins us to discuss strategic learning in recommender systems—what happens when users collectively coordinate to game recommendation algorithms. Kat's research r...

27 Feb 54min

Niche vs Mainstream

Niche vs Mainstream

Anas Buhayh discusses multi-stakeholder fairness in recommender systems and the S'mores framework—a simulation allowing users to choose between mainstream and niche algorithms. His research shows spec...

18 Feb 34min

Healthy Friction in Job Recommender Systems

Healthy Friction in Job Recommender Systems

In this episode, host Kyle Polich speaks with Roan Schellingerhout, a fourth-year PhD student at Maastricht University, about explainable multi-stakeholder recommender systems for job recruitment. Roa...

2 Feb 26min

Fairness in PCA-Based Recommenders

Fairness in PCA-Based Recommenders

In this episode, we explore the fascinating world of recommender systems and algorithmic fairness with David Liu, Assistant Research Professor at Cornell University's Center for Data Science for Enter...

26 Jan 49min

Populärt inom Vetenskap

allt-du-velat-veta
dumma-manniskor
p3-dystopia
rss-ufobortom-rimligt-tvivel
ufo-sverige
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
sexet
medicinvetarna
svd-nyhetsartiklar
rss-vetenskapsradion
hacka-livet
rss-vetenskapsradion-2
paranormalt-med-caroline-giertz
det-morka-psyket
ufo-sverige-2
rss-spraket
halsorevolutionen
rss-klotet
dumforklarat
ideer-som-forandrar-varlden