Showing relevant search results to the user is the primary challenge for any search system. Walmart e-commerce provides an omnichannel search platform to its customers to search from millions of products. This search platform takes a textual query as input and shows relevant items from the catalog. One of the primary challenges is that this queries are complex to understand as it contains multiple intent in many cases. This paper proposes a framework to group search results into multiple ranked lists intending to provide better user intent. The framework is to create a product graph having relations between product entities and utilize it to group search results into a series of stacks where each stack provides a group of items based on a precise intent. As an example, for a query "milk," the results can be grouped into multiple stacks of "white milk", "low-fat milk", "almond milk", "flavored milk". We measure the impact of our algorithm by evaluating how it improves the user experience both in terms of search quality relevance and user behavioral signals like Add-To-Cart.
Predicting signed links in social networks often faces the problem of signed link data sparsity, i.e., only a small percentage of signed links are given. The problem is exacerbated when the number of negative links is much smaller than that of positive links. Boosting signed link prediction necessitates additional information to compensate for data sparsity. According to psychology theories, one rich source of such information is user's personality such as optimism and pessimism that can help determine her propensity in establishing positive and negative links. In this study, we investigate how personality information can be obtained, and if personality information can help alleviate the data sparsity problem for signed link prediction. We propose a novel signed link prediction model that enables empirical exploration of user personality via social media data. We evaluate our proposed model on two datasets of real-world signed link networks. The results demonstrate the complementary role of personality information in the signed link prediction problem. Experimental results also indicate the effectiveness of different levels of personality information for signed link data sparsity problem.