Symbolic Knowledge Extraction for Explainable Nutritional Recommenders

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Matteo Magnini, Giovanni Ciatto, Furkan Cantürk, Reyhan Aydoǧan, Andrea Omicini
Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine 235, article 107536 (32 pages)
June 2023

Background and objective This paper focuses on nutritional recommendation systems (RS), i.e. AI-powered automatic systems providing users with suggestions about what to eat to pursue their weight/body shape goals. A trade-off among (potentially) conflictual requirements must be taken into account when designing these kinds of systems, there including: (i) adherence to experts’ prescriptions, (ii) adherence to users’ tastes and preferences, (iii) explainability of the whole recommendation process. Accordingly, in this paper we propose a novel approach to the engineering of nutritional RS, combining machine learning and symbolic knowledge extraction to profile users—hence harmonising the aforementioned requirements.

Methods Our contribution focuses on the data processing workflow. Stemming from neural networks (NN) trained to predict user preferences, we use CART Breiman et al.(1984) to extract symbolic rules in Prolog Körner et al.(2022) form, and we combine them with expert prescriptions brought in similar form. We can then query the resulting symbolic knowledge base via logic solvers, to draw explainable recommendations.

Results Experiments are performed involving a publicly available dataset of 45,723 recipes, plus 12 synthetic datasets about as many imaginary users, and 6 experts’ prescriptions. Fully-connected 4-layered NN are trained on those datasets, reaching ∼86% test-set accuracy, on average. Extracted rules, in turn, have ∼80% fidelity w.r.t. those NN. The resulting recommendation system has a test-set precision of ∼74%. The symbolic approach makes it possible to devise how the system draws recommendations.

Conclusions Thanks to our approach, intelligent agents may learn users’ preferences from data, convert them into symbolic form, and extend them with experts’ goal-directed prescriptions. The resulting recommendations are then simultaneously acceptable for the end user and adequate under a nutritional perspective, while the whole process of recommendation generation is made explainable.

keywordsexplainable artificial intelligence, symbolic knowledge extraction, recommendation systems, nutrition, neural networks
journal or series
book Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine (CMPB)
funding project
wrenchEXPECTATION — Personalized Explainable Artificial Intelligence for decentralized agents with heterogeneous knowledge (01/04/2021–31/03/2024)