4,222 research outputs found
Semi-supervised co-clustering on attributed heterogeneous information networks
trueThe embargo period should be 2 years -- not sure why under the drop down I can only select one year. Please validate.</p
A Survey of Graph Neural Networks for Social Recommender Systems
Social recommender systems (SocialRS) simultaneously leverage user-to-item
interactions as well as user-to-user social relations for the task of
generating item recommendations to users. Additionally exploiting social
relations is clearly effective in understanding users' tastes due to the
effects of homophily and social influence. For this reason, SocialRS has
increasingly attracted attention. In particular, with the advance of Graph
Neural Networks (GNN), many GNN-based SocialRS methods have been developed
recently. Therefore, we conduct a comprehensive and systematic review of the
literature on GNN-based SocialRS. In this survey, we first identify 80 papers
on GNN-based SocialRS after annotating 2151 papers by following the PRISMA
framework (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis).
Then, we comprehensively review them in terms of their inputs and architectures
to propose a novel taxonomy: (1) input taxonomy includes 5 groups of input type
notations and 7 groups of input representation notations; (2) architecture
taxonomy includes 8 groups of GNN encoder, 2 groups of decoder, and 12 groups
of loss function notations. We classify the GNN-based SocialRS methods into
several categories as per the taxonomy and describe their details. Furthermore,
we summarize the benchmark datasets and metrics widely used to evaluate the
GNN-based SocialRS methods. Finally, we conclude this survey by presenting some
future research directions.Comment: GitHub repository with the curated list of papers:
https://github.com/claws-lab/awesome-GNN-social-recsy
DUKweb, diachronic word representations from the UK Web Archive corpus
Lexical semantic change (detecting shifts in the meaning and usage of words) is an important task for social and cultural studies as well as for Natural Language Processing applications. Diachronic word embeddings (time-sensitive vector representations of words that preserve their meaning) have become the standard resource for this task. However, given the significant computational resources needed for their generation, very few resources exist that make diachronic word embeddings available to the scientific community. In this paper we present DUKweb, a set of large-scale resources designed for the diachronic analysis of contemporary English. DUKweb was created from the JISC UK Web Domain Dataset (1996–2013), a very large archive which collects resources from the Internet Archive that were hosted on domains ending in ‘.uk’. DUKweb consists of a series word co-occurrence matrices and two types of word embeddings for each year in the JISC UK Web Domain dataset. We show the reuse potential of DUKweb and its quality standards via a case study on word meaning change detection
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