4,205 research outputs found
Signed Distance-based Deep Memory Recommender
Personalized recommendation algorithms learn a user's preference for an item
by measuring a distance/similarity between them. However, some of the existing
recommendation models (e.g., matrix factorization) assume a linear relationship
between the user and item. This approach limits the capacity of recommender
systems, since the interactions between users and items in real-world
applications are much more complex than the linear relationship. To overcome
this limitation, in this paper, we design and propose a deep learning framework
called Signed Distance-based Deep Memory Recommender, which captures non-linear
relationships between users and items explicitly and implicitly, and work well
in both general recommendation task and shopping basket-based recommendation
task. Through an extensive empirical study on six real-world datasets in the
two recommendation tasks, our proposed approach achieved significant
improvement over ten state-of-the-art recommendation models
NAIS: Neural Attentive Item Similarity Model for Recommendation
Item-to-item collaborative filtering (aka. item-based CF) has been long used
for building recommender systems in industrial settings, owing to its
interpretability and efficiency in real-time personalization. It builds a
user's profile as her historically interacted items, recommending new items
that are similar to the user's profile. As such, the key to an item-based CF
method is in the estimation of item similarities. Early approaches use
statistical measures such as cosine similarity and Pearson coefficient to
estimate item similarities, which are less accurate since they lack tailored
optimization for the recommendation task. In recent years, several works
attempt to learn item similarities from data, by expressing the similarity as
an underlying model and estimating model parameters by optimizing a
recommendation-aware objective function. While extensive efforts have been made
to use shallow linear models for learning item similarities, there has been
relatively less work exploring nonlinear neural network models for item-based
CF.
In this work, we propose a neural network model named Neural Attentive Item
Similarity model (NAIS) for item-based CF. The key to our design of NAIS is an
attention network, which is capable of distinguishing which historical items in
a user profile are more important for a prediction. Compared to the
state-of-the-art item-based CF method Factored Item Similarity Model (FISM),
our NAIS has stronger representation power with only a few additional
parameters brought by the attention network. Extensive experiments on two
public benchmarks demonstrate the effectiveness of NAIS. This work is the first
attempt that designs neural network models for item-based CF, opening up new
research possibilities for future developments of neural recommender systems
Session-based Recommendation with Graph Neural Networks
The problem of session-based recommendation aims to predict user actions
based on anonymous sessions. Previous methods model a session as a sequence and
estimate user representations besides item representations to make
recommendations. Though achieved promising results, they are insufficient to
obtain accurate user vectors in sessions and neglect complex transitions of
items. To obtain accurate item embedding and take complex transitions of items
into account, we propose a novel method, i.e. Session-based Recommendation with
Graph Neural Networks, SR-GNN for brevity. In the proposed method, session
sequences are modeled as graph-structured data. Based on the session graph, GNN
can capture complex transitions of items, which are difficult to be revealed by
previous conventional sequential methods. Each session is then represented as
the composition of the global preference and the current interest of that
session using an attention network. Extensive experiments conducted on two real
datasets show that SR-GNN evidently outperforms the state-of-the-art
session-based recommendation methods consistently.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, accepted by AAAI Conference on Artificial
Intelligence (AAAI-19
Sequential Recommendation with Self-Attentive Multi-Adversarial Network
Recently, deep learning has made significant progress in the task of
sequential recommendation. Existing neural sequential recommenders typically
adopt a generative way trained with Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE). When
context information (called factor) is involved, it is difficult to analyze
when and how each individual factor would affect the final recommendation
performance. For this purpose, we take a new perspective and introduce
adversarial learning to sequential recommendation. In this paper, we present a
Multi-Factor Generative Adversarial Network (MFGAN) for explicitly modeling the
effect of context information on sequential recommendation. Specifically, our
proposed MFGAN has two kinds of modules: a Transformer-based generator taking
user behavior sequences as input to recommend the possible next items, and
multiple factor-specific discriminators to evaluate the generated sub-sequence
from the perspectives of different factors. To learn the parameters, we adopt
the classic policy gradient method, and utilize the reward signal of
discriminators for guiding the learning of the generator. Our framework is
flexible to incorporate multiple kinds of factor information, and is able to
trace how each factor contributes to the recommendation decision over time.
Extensive experiments conducted on three real-world datasets demonstrate the
superiority of our proposed model over the state-of-the-art methods, in terms
of effectiveness and interpretability
Lifelong Sequential Modeling with Personalized Memorization for User Response Prediction
User response prediction, which models the user preference w.r.t. the
presented items, plays a key role in online services. With two-decade rapid
development, nowadays the cumulated user behavior sequences on mature Internet
service platforms have become extremely long since the user's first
registration. Each user not only has intrinsic tastes, but also keeps changing
her personal interests during lifetime. Hence, it is challenging to handle such
lifelong sequential modeling for each individual user. Existing methodologies
for sequential modeling are only capable of dealing with relatively recent user
behaviors, which leaves huge space for modeling long-term especially lifelong
sequential patterns to facilitate user modeling. Moreover, one user's behavior
may be accounted for various previous behaviors within her whole online
activity history, i.e., long-term dependency with multi-scale sequential
patterns. In order to tackle these challenges, in this paper, we propose a
Hierarchical Periodic Memory Network for lifelong sequential modeling with
personalized memorization of sequential patterns for each user. The model also
adopts a hierarchical and periodical updating mechanism to capture multi-scale
sequential patterns of user interests while supporting the evolving user
behavior logs. The experimental results over three large-scale real-world
datasets have demonstrated the advantages of our proposed model with
significant improvement in user response prediction performance against the
state-of-the-arts.Comment: SIGIR 2019. Reproducible codes and datasets:
https://github.com/alimamarankgroup/HPM
Deep Learning for Recommender Systems
The widespread adoption of the Internet has led to an explosion in the number of choices available to consumers. Users begin to expect personalized content in modern E-commerce, entertainment and social media platforms. Recommender Systems (RS) provide a critical solution to this problem by maintaining user engagement and satisfaction with personalized content.
Traditional RS techniques are often linear limiting the expressivity required to model complex user-item interactions and require extensive handcrafted features from domain experts. Deep learning demonstrated significant breakthroughs in solving problems that have alluded the artificial intelligence community for many years advancing state-of-the-art results in domains such as computer vision and natural language processing.
The recommender domain consists of heterogeneous and semantically rich data such as unstructured text (e.g. product descriptions), categorical attributes (e.g. genre of a movie), and user-item feedback (e.g. purchases). Deep learning can automatically capture the intricate structure of user preferences by encoding learned feature representations from high dimensional data.
In this thesis, we explore five novel applications of deep learning-based techniques to address top-n recommendation. First, we propose Collaborative Memory Network, which unifies the strengths of the latent factor model and neighborhood-based methods inspired by Memory Networks to address collaborative filtering with implicit feedback. Second, we propose Neural Semantic Personalized Ranking, a novel probabilistic generative modeling approach to integrate deep neural network with pairwise ranking for the item cold-start problem. Third, we propose Attentive Contextual Denoising Autoencoder augmented with a context-driven attention mechanism to integrate arbitrary user and item attributes. Fourth, we propose a flexible encoder-decoder architecture called Neural Citation Network, embodying a powerful max time delay neural network encoder augmented with an attention mechanism and author networks to address context-aware citation recommendation. Finally, we propose a generic framework to perform conversational movie recommendations which leverages transfer learning to infer user preferences from natural language. Comprehensive experiments validate the effectiveness of all five proposed models against competitive baseline methods and demonstrate the successful adaptation of deep learning-based techniques to the recommendation domain
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