PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Can the digital advertising market achieve privacy without regulation?

New research shows that the ad networks may have natural incentives to safeguard consumer privacy

2021-03-08
(Press-News.org) Key Takeaways:

Machine learning offers more accurate targeting in mobile advertising. Behavioral targeting is more effective than contextual targeting. There is a possibility for self-regulation because too much behavioral targeting can reduce competition and hurt ad networks' revenues.

CATONSVILLE, MD, March 8, 2021 - It's a common assumption among marketers that if you can customize any form of marketing, particularly mobile advertising, you'll get better results. With this in mind, mobile marketing relies significantly on user tracking data as a cornerstone advertising strategy.

New research has looked into the value of user tracking data for targeting purposes and offered some insights about the privacy outcomes of such activities in a multisided mobile advertising market. This not only represents new thinking on marketing strategy, but could help mitigate certain societal concerns over privacy issues and the use of certain tracking data in mobile advertising.

The research study, "Targeting and Privacy in Mobile Advertising," is to be published in the March issue of the INFORMS journal Marketing Science. It is authored by Omid Rafieian of Cornell University and Hema Yoganarasimhan of the University of Washington.

The study found that a machine learning-based targeting approach improves the average click-through rate by more than 66.8% compared to simpler targeting models.

"The difference mainly stems from behavioral information as opposed to contextual information," said Rafieian. "What this means is that the machine-learning approach is able to learn user preferences from their past behavioral data, such as the ads they have seen and clicked on. Unlike traditional approaches, machine-learning methods do not put restrictive assumption on user behavior, and in turn, are able to identify more complex patterns in user preference."

"Once we established the effectiveness of our machine-learning approach, we turned to the privacy question: can we expect any stop on behavioral targeting and user tracking in this market?," said Yoganarasimhan. "What we found was that although behavioral targeting helps advertisers find better match with impressions, the ad network may want to protect consumer privacy and not allow very granular behavioral targeting for economic reasons. This is because too much targeting can result in softer competition between advertisers, where each advertiser cherry-picks narrow segments, thereby leading to lower revenues for ad networks."

The research used large-scale data from a leading in-app network of a country in Asia. Study authors created a machine-learning framework for targeting that uses both contextual and behavioral information. They conducted a comprehensive comparison between the value of contextual and behavioral targeting from different players' viewpoints. The key insight from the paper was a misalignment between what ad networks and advertisers want: while advertisers demand more privacy-invasive targeting tools, ad networks have natural economic incentives to limit behavioral targeting to increase competition between advertisers. This hints at a future where the market can self-regulate and protect consumers' privacy.

INFORMATION:

About INFORMS and Marketing Science

Marketing Science is a premier peer-reviewed scholarly marketing journal focused on research using quantitative approaches to study all aspects of the interface between consumers and firms. It is published by INFORMS, the leading international association for operations research and analytics professionals. More information is available at http://www.informs.org or @informs.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Watching the brain learn

Watching the brain learn
2021-03-08
Understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying brain "plasticity"(how the brain can learn, develop and reorganise itself) is crucial for explaining many illnesses and conditions. Neurocientists from the University of Göttingen and University Medical Center Göttingen (UMG) have now managed to repeatedly image synapses, the tiny contact sites between neurons, in awake adult mice. They are the first to discover that adult neurons in the primary visual cortex with an increased number of "silent synapses" (ie newly formed synapses that are inactivated), lacking a certain protein (PSD-95), display structural changes that were previously only reported in young mice. This ...

90% of young women report using a filter or editing their photos before posting

2021-03-08
Professor Rosalind Gill, from City, University of London's Gender and Sexualities Research Centre, has today published a new report to mark International Women's Day. The report - Changing the Perfect Picture: Smartphones, Social Media and Appearance Pressures - is based on research with 175 young women and nonbinary people in the UK. Covering a range of issues - experiences of lockdown, feelings about 'body positivity', how to show support for Black Lives Matter - the research documents young people's persistent anger with a mass media that they deem 'too white', 'too heterosexual' and too focused on very narrow definitions ...

Study identifies resilience factors to mitigate burnout in college students

2021-03-08
Mental health issues such as burnout and psychological distress are matters for concern among young adults, and are even more pertinent in today's uncertain global climate. A recent paper by Yale-NUS College alumna Ms Joanna Chue (Class of 2019) and Assistant Professor of Social Sciences (Psychology) Cheung Hoi Shan identified five components of resilience that are applicable in Singapore's cultural context, and demonstrated that college students possessing a higher degree of resilience were less susceptible to burnout and psychological distress. By identifying learnable components ...

Making artificial intelligence understandable -- Constructing explanation processes

2021-03-08
Researchers at Paderborn and Bielefeld University are hoping to change this, and are discussing how the explainability of artificial intelligence can be improved and adapted to the needs of human users. Their work has recently been published in the respected journal IEEE Transactions on Cognitive and Developmental Systems. The researchers describe explanation as a social practice, in which both parties co-construct the process of understanding. Explainability research "Artificial systems have become complex. This is a serious problem - particularly when humans are held accountable for computer-based decisions," says Professor Philipp Cimiano, a computer scientist at Bielefeld University. Particularly in the ...

Predicting success in therapy with individualized cancer models

Predicting success in therapy with individualized cancer models
2021-03-08
In the EU alone, 78,800 men died of prostate cancer last year. While tumors discovered at an early stage can often be completely removed by surgery and radiation therapy, the prospects of successful treatment are reduced if the cancer has further metastasized. At present, physicians cannot predict drug response or therapy resistance in patients. Three-dimensional structures The team led by PD Dr. Marianna Kruithof-de Julio at the Urology Research Laboratory at the Department for BioMedical Research (DBMR) of the University of Bern and Inselspital Bern, has developed a new strategy for the generation of prostate cancer organoids that ...

'Island of Rats' recovers

Island of Rats recovers
2021-03-08
Along the western edge of Alaska's Aleutian archipelago, a group of islands that were inadvertently populated with rodents came to earn the ignominious label of the "Rat Islands." The non-native invaders were accidentally introduced to these islands, and others throughout the Aleutian chain, through shipwrecks dating back to the 1700s and World War II occupation. The resilient rodents, which are known to be among the most damaging invasive animals, adapted and thrived in the new setting and eventually overwhelmed the island ecosystems, disrupting the natural ecological order and driving out native species. A coordinated conservation effort that removed the rats from one of the islands formerly known as Rat Island has become a new example of how ecosystems can ...

Tocilizumab cuts mortality risk in severely ill COVID-19 patients finds new trial conducted in India

2021-03-08
Tocilizumab, an anti-inflammatory drug used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, improves outcomes in severely ill COVID-19 patients, finds the results of a new trial conducted in hospitals across India -- one of the world's most ethnically diverse countries. Researchers from the University of Bristol and Medanta Institute of Education and Research in India who led the study, published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, say it adds to existing evidence supporting the drug's use in critically ill patients. Conducted in 12 public and private hospitals across India, the COVID ...

Retreat to win -- How to sustain an online campaign and survive trolling and abuse

2021-03-08
Trolling and extreme levels of abuse can kill an online campaign but momentum can be maintained, and the energy and morale of exhausted activists effectively restored, by tactical retreat and taking time out, new research into the landmark 'No More Page 3' campaign in the United Kingdom shows. Dr. Sarah Glozer of the University of Bath School of Management and Dr. Lauren McCarthy of the Royal Holloway University of London School of Business and Management studied the 'No More Page 3' campaign, which from 2012 lobbied The Sun mass-circulation newspaper to stop publishing a photo of a topless woman on page 3, a daily feature launched in 1970. Page 3, the No More Page 3 campaign argued, was a symbol of institutionalised sexism. The Sun removed the Page 3 feature ...

Research shows we're surprisingly similar to Earth's first animals

Research shows were surprisingly similar to Earths first animals
2021-03-08
The earliest multicellular organisms may have lacked heads, legs, or arms, but pieces of them remain inside of us today, new research shows. According to a UC Riverside study, 555-million-year-old oceanic creatures from the Ediacaran period share genes with today's animals, including humans. "None of them had heads or skeletons. Many of them probably looked like three-dimensional bathmats on the sea floor, round discs that stuck up," said Mary Droser, a geology professor at UCR. "These animals are so weird and so different, it's difficult to assign them to modern categories of living organisms just by looking at them, and it's not like we can extract their DNA -- we can't." However, well-preserved fossil records ...

Paw hygiene no reason to ban assistance dogs from hospitals

Paw hygiene no reason to ban assistance dogs from hospitals
2021-03-08
Over 10,000 people in Europe use an assistance dog; think of guide dogs for people with a visual impairment, hearing dogs for people with a hearing impairment, medical response service dogs and psychiatric service dogs. According to a UN-agreement and the Dutch law, these dogs are welcome in stores, hospitals and other public places. However, in practice, many assistance dog users and their dogs are regularly refused entry. In the Netherlands, four out of five assistance dog users indicate that they regularly experience problems with this. Often, hygiene reasons are ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New Durham University study reveals mystery of decaying exoplanet orbits

The threat of polio paralysis may have disappeared, but enterovirus paralysis is just as dangerous and surveillance and testing systems are desperately needed

Study shows ChatGPT failed when challenging ESCMID guideline for treating brain abscesses

Study finds resistance to critically important antibiotics in uncooked meat sold for human and animal consumption

Global cervical cancer vaccine roll-out shows it to be very effective in reducing cervical cancer and other HPV-related disease, but huge variations between countries in coverage

Negativity about vaccines surged on Twitter after COVID-19 jabs become available

Global measles cases almost double in a year

Lower dose of mpox vaccine is safe and generates six-week antibody response equivalent to standard regimen

Personalised “cocktails” of antibiotics, probiotics and prebiotics hold great promise in treating a common form of irritable bowel syndrome, pilot study finds

Experts developing immune-enhancing therapies to target tuberculosis

Making transfusion-transmitted malaria in Europe a thing of the past

Experts developing way to harness Nobel Prize winning CRISPR technology to deal with antimicrobial resistance (AMR)

CRISPR is promising to tackle antimicrobial resistance, but remember bacteria can fight back

Ancient Maya blessed their ballcourts

Curran named Fellow of SAE, ASME

Computer scientists unveil novel attacks on cybersecurity

Florida International University graduate student selected for inaugural IDEA2 public policy fellowship

Gene linked to epilepsy, autism decoded in new study

OHSU study finds big jump in addiction treatment at community health clinics

Location, location, location

Getting dynamic information from static snapshots

Food insecurity is significant among inhabitants of the region affected by the Belo Monte dam in Brazil

The Society of Thoracic Surgeons launches new valve surgery risk calculators

Component of keto diet plus immunotherapy may reduce prostate cancer

New circuit boards can be repeatedly recycled

Blood test finds knee osteoarthritis up to eight years before it appears on x-rays

April research news from the Ecological Society of America

Antimicrobial resistance crisis: “Antibiotics are not magic bullets”

Florida dolphin found with highly pathogenic avian flu: Report

Barcodes expand range of high-resolution sensor

[Press-News.org] Can the digital advertising market achieve privacy without regulation?
New research shows that the ad networks may have natural incentives to safeguard consumer privacy