3,014 research outputs found

    Herding Effect based Attention for Personalized Time-Sync Video Recommendation

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    Time-sync comment (TSC) is a new form of user-interaction review associated with real-time video contents, which contains a user's preferences for videos and therefore well suited as the data source for video recommendations. However, existing review-based recommendation methods ignore the context-dependent (generated by user-interaction), real-time, and time-sensitive properties of TSC data. To bridge the above gaps, in this paper, we use video images and users' TSCs to design an Image-Text Fusion model with a novel Herding Effect Attention mechanism (called ITF-HEA), which can predict users' favorite videos with model-based collaborative filtering. Specifically, in the HEA mechanism, we weight the context information based on the semantic similarities and time intervals between each TSC and its context, thereby considering influences of the herding effect in the model. Experiments show that ITF-HEA is on average 3.78\% higher than the state-of-the-art method upon F1-score in baselines.Comment: ACCEPTED for ORAL presentation at IEEE ICME 201

    Explainable Neural Attention Recommender Systems

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    Recommender systems, predictive models that provide lists of personalized suggestions, have become increasingly popular in many web-based businesses. By presenting potential items that may interest a user, these systems are able to better monetize and improve users’ satisfaction. In recent years, the most successful approaches rely on capturing what best define users and items in the form of latent vectors, a numeric representation that assumes all instances can be described by their respective affiliation towards a set of hidden features. However, recommendation methods based on latent features still face some realworld limitations. The data sparsity problem originates from the unprecedented variety of available items, making generated suggestions irrelevant to many users. Furthermore, many systems have been recently expected to accompany their suggestions with corresponding reasoning. Users who receive unjustified recommendations they do not agree with are susceptible to stop using the system or ignore its suggestions. In this work we investigate the current trends in the field of recommender systems and focus on two rising areas, deep recommendation and explainable recommender systems. First we present Textual and Contextual Embedding-based Neural Recommender (TCENR), a model that mitigates the data sparsity problem in the area of point-of-interest (POI) recommendation. This method employs different types of deep neural networks to learn varied perspectives of the same user-location interaction, using textual reviews, geographical data and social networks

    Explainable Neural Attention Recommender Systems

    Get PDF
    Recommender systems, predictive models that provide lists of personalized suggestions, have become increasingly popular in many web-based businesses. By presenting potential items that may interest a user, these systems are able to better monetize and improve users’ satisfaction. In recent years, the most successful approaches rely on capturing what best define users and items in the form of latent vectors, a numeric representation that assumes all instances can be described by their respective affiliation towards a set of hidden features. However, recommendation methods based on latent features still face some realworld limitations. The data sparsity problem originates from the unprecedented variety of available items, making generated suggestions irrelevant to many users. Furthermore, many systems have been recently expected to accompany their suggestions with corresponding reasoning. Users who receive unjustified recommendations they do not agree with are susceptible to stop using the system or ignore its suggestions. In this work we investigate the current trends in the field of recommender systems and focus on two rising areas, deep recommendation and explainable recommender systems. First we present Textual and Contextual Embedding-based Neural Recommender (TCENR), a model that mitigates the data sparsity problem in the area of point-of-interest (POI) recommendation. This method employs different types of deep neural networks to learn varied perspectives of the same user-location interaction, using textual reviews, geographical data and social networks
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