57,930 research outputs found
A Trio Neural Model for Dynamic Entity Relatedness Ranking
Measuring entity relatedness is a fundamental task for many natural language
processing and information retrieval applications. Prior work often studies
entity relatedness in static settings and an unsupervised manner. However,
entities in real-world are often involved in many different relationships,
consequently entity-relations are very dynamic over time. In this work, we
propose a neural networkbased approach for dynamic entity relatedness,
leveraging the collective attention as supervision. Our model is capable of
learning rich and different entity representations in a joint framework.
Through extensive experiments on large-scale datasets, we demonstrate that our
method achieves better results than competitive baselines.Comment: In Proceedings of CoNLL 201
KGAT: Knowledge Graph Attention Network for Recommendation
To provide more accurate, diverse, and explainable recommendation, it is
compulsory to go beyond modeling user-item interactions and take side
information into account. Traditional methods like factorization machine (FM)
cast it as a supervised learning problem, which assumes each interaction as an
independent instance with side information encoded. Due to the overlook of the
relations among instances or items (e.g., the director of a movie is also an
actor of another movie), these methods are insufficient to distill the
collaborative signal from the collective behaviors of users. In this work, we
investigate the utility of knowledge graph (KG), which breaks down the
independent interaction assumption by linking items with their attributes. We
argue that in such a hybrid structure of KG and user-item graph, high-order
relations --- which connect two items with one or multiple linked attributes
--- are an essential factor for successful recommendation. We propose a new
method named Knowledge Graph Attention Network (KGAT) which explicitly models
the high-order connectivities in KG in an end-to-end fashion. It recursively
propagates the embeddings from a node's neighbors (which can be users, items,
or attributes) to refine the node's embedding, and employs an attention
mechanism to discriminate the importance of the neighbors. Our KGAT is
conceptually advantageous to existing KG-based recommendation methods, which
either exploit high-order relations by extracting paths or implicitly modeling
them with regularization. Empirical results on three public benchmarks show
that KGAT significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods like Neural FM and
RippleNet. Further studies verify the efficacy of embedding propagation for
high-order relation modeling and the interpretability benefits brought by the
attention mechanism.Comment: KDD 2019 research trac
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