2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.ipm.2019.05.012
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Eating healthier: Exploring nutrition information for healthier recipe recommendation

Abstract: With the booming of personalized recipe sharing networks (e.g., Yummly), a deluge of recipes from different cuisines could be obtained easily. In this paper, we aim to solve a problem which many home-cooks encounter when searching for recipes online. Namely, finding recipes which best fit a handy set of ingredients while at the same time follow healthy eating guidelines. This task is especially difficult since the lions share of online recipes have been shown to be unhealthy.In this paper we propose a novel fr… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…To make the VA services more 'personalized', collecting and analyzing personal information is required for tailoring the services and related contents as per the needs of the target users. In general, the users are willing to share their personal information in return of personalized services, like getting greetings on their birthdays with special discount coupons, book recommendations, travel suggestions or even recipe suggestions based on their health and nutritional requirements [49][50][51][52]. Another research shows that the users are very positive about receiving personalized services and are even willing to watch advertisements in return for a specific product they had been looking for [53].…”
Section: The First Channel: Antecedents Of Perceived Benefitsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…To make the VA services more 'personalized', collecting and analyzing personal information is required for tailoring the services and related contents as per the needs of the target users. In general, the users are willing to share their personal information in return of personalized services, like getting greetings on their birthdays with special discount coupons, book recommendations, travel suggestions or even recipe suggestions based on their health and nutritional requirements [49][50][51][52]. Another research shows that the users are very positive about receiving personalized services and are even willing to watch advertisements in return for a specific product they had been looking for [53].…”
Section: The First Channel: Antecedents Of Perceived Benefitsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As stated previously, the privacy calculus framework enables the users to do a risk-benefit analysis of the motivational factors that either act as a positive or negative catalyst of personal information disclosure. If the users feel that they get some benefits like greater personalized services [49][50][51][52][53][54][55], enjoyment [4,[56][57][58][59][60], convenience [81] or monetary rewards by disclosing their private information [82], then they will forgo some level of their privacy in return for the perceived benefits. Therefore, it is the subjective evaluation of the potential gains or the positives.…”
Section: Outcome Of the Privacy Calculus Framework And Continuance Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Approaches to health-focused food recommender systems have used energy balancing (Ge et al 2015b), distance from an estimated nutritional requirements (Elsweiler et al 2015b), or re-weighting according to health metrics (Trattner and Elsweiler 2017b). Beyond prediction of ratings or ranking based on an existing set of recipes, other efforts have been focused on suggesting healthier ingredient substitutes (Achananuparp and Weber 2016) or on generating healthier pseudo recipes (Chen et al 2019). The implemented algorithm in the Nutrilize system is a content-based approach for both health and taste estimation that integrates both energy balancing and nutritional requirements.…”
Section: Food Recommender Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been mentioned the many advantages of embedding models referring to fusion heterogeneous food data for multiple purposes, where nutritional and social media textual data are integrated (Salvador et al, 2017) more specialized in resolving image recognition tasks rather than language processing. In (Chen et al, 2019), the authors used a word embedding model to detect ingredient relations to create pseudo-recipes. They used a model trained on a list of recipes to detect which ingredients appear together in recipes.…”
Section: Recipe Generation and Completionmentioning
confidence: 99%