An analgous website feature worth thinking about might be Wikipedia watchlists. They have the same star UI as favourites here, and they allow the following use cases:
Bookmark things that are interesting or useful. To find something again, users typically go to their Special:EditWatchlist page, which contains a list of all the articles they've watchlisted.
Stay up to date on recent changes to articles (but without bombarding users with unwanted notifications). To do this, users typically go to Special:Watchlist, which contains a most-recent-first sorted list of article changes, including, most importantly:
the name of the user who made the most recent change,
the change's edit message,
and a direct link to the change diff.
Two main differences between Wikipedia's watchlist and Stack Exchange's favourites list:
On Wikipedia, users can get to their watchlist with a single click from any page via a link at the top right. On Stack Exchange, users need to (1) click profile and then (2) click favourites. That's an extra step, so this page probably isn't visited as frequently.
On Wikipedia, the changes contain a lot more detail and more direct links to relevant information.
Example watchlist screenshot: (pretty dense and verbose, but eh)
So one idea might be to just make the favourites page more visible so that you can visit it more frequently. You know, using polling instead of interrupts.
Wikipedia has an option to turn on email notifications every time a page on your watchlist is updated, so that's also an option...