What is arXivDigest?

A scientific literature recommendation service

Motivated by the accelerating pace at which scientific knowledge is being produced, we aim to provide a recommendation service that helps researchers to keep up with scientific literature. Specifically, we create a personalized email digest of the most recent papers published at arXiv.org at regular intervals, based on your interest profile. Based on your interactions with the recommendations, we can improve the service to serve you with even better recommendations in the future.

We provide the service for free. Well, almost. You pay for it by donating the data you generate for research purposes. Basically, you allow us to disclose, via our API, your profile information (name, websites, and topics of interest), the recommendations you received, and how you interacted with those recommendations. Note that you can download your personal data any time from the system to see what information is stored about you. And, of course, you have a right to be forgotten and be removed from our system. Please have a look at our Privacy Policy, then hit signup if you're ready to give it a try.

For those that are curious, all the code behind this site and service is open source and is available on GitHub.

A living lab

ArXivDigest operates as a living lab platform. It means that third-party researchers can experiment with novel recommendation approaches ("recommendations AI"), and the generated suggestions will be shown to users of the arXivDigest service. This allows for realistic, in situ evaluation with real users. Further, user interactions can be utilized for improving recommendation and explanation capabilities.

If you are a researcher who is interested in participating, then check out our GitHub pages for more information.

Creators

ArXivDigest is developed and operated by the IAI group at the University of Stavanger. Specifically, the development is led by Krisztian Balog, and the implementation is being done by Øyvind Jekteberg and Kristian Gingstad as part of their former BSc and current MSc thesis projects.