1,332 research outputs found
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
Recommender systems and their ethical challenges
This article presents the first, systematic analysis of the ethical challenges posed by recommender systems through a literature review. The article identifies six areas of concern, and maps them onto a proposed taxonomy of different kinds of ethical impact. The analysis uncovers a gap in the literature: currently user-centred approaches do not consider the interests of a variety of other stakeholders—as opposed to just the receivers of a recommendation—in assessing the ethical impacts of a recommender system
The state-of-the-art in personalized recommender systems for social networking
With the explosion of Web 2.0 application such as blogs, social and professional networks, and various other types of social media, the rich online information and various new sources of knowledge flood users and hence pose a great challenge in terms of information overload. It is critical to use intelligent agent software systems to assist users in finding the right information from an abundance of Web data. Recommender systems can help users deal with information overload problem efficiently by suggesting items (e.g., information and products) that match users’ personal interests. The recommender technology has been successfully employed in many applications such as recommending films, music, books, etc. The purpose of this report is to give an overview of existing technologies for building personalized recommender systems in social networking environment, to propose a research direction for addressing user profiling and cold start problems by exploiting user-generated content newly available in Web 2.0
Web Personalization Using Implicit Input
Perkembangan penggunaan Web dalam hidupan harian kami telah
menyebabkan lebih banyak kajian dijalankan ke atas konsep personalisasi.
The growing importance of the World Wide Web in our lives has intensified the
studies on personalization
News Session-Based Recommendations using Deep Neural Networks
News recommender systems are aimed to personalize users experiences and help
them to discover relevant articles from a large and dynamic search space.
Therefore, news domain is a challenging scenario for recommendations, due to
its sparse user profiling, fast growing number of items, accelerated item's
value decay, and users preferences dynamic shift. Some promising results have
been recently achieved by the usage of Deep Learning techniques on Recommender
Systems, specially for item's feature extraction and for session-based
recommendations with Recurrent Neural Networks. In this paper, it is proposed
an instantiation of the CHAMELEON -- a Deep Learning Meta-Architecture for News
Recommender Systems. This architecture is composed of two modules, the first
responsible to learn news articles representations, based on their text and
metadata, and the second module aimed to provide session-based recommendations
using Recurrent Neural Networks. The recommendation task addressed in this work
is next-item prediction for users sessions: "what is the next most likely
article a user might read in a session?" Users sessions context is leveraged by
the architecture to provide additional information in such extreme cold-start
scenario of news recommendation. Users' behavior and item features are both
merged in an hybrid recommendation approach. A temporal offline evaluation
method is also proposed as a complementary contribution, for a more realistic
evaluation of such task, considering dynamic factors that affect global
readership interests like popularity, recency, and seasonality. Experiments
with an extensive number of session-based recommendation methods were performed
and the proposed instantiation of CHAMELEON meta-architecture obtained a
significant relative improvement in top-n accuracy and ranking metrics (10% on
Hit Rate and 13% on MRR) over the best benchmark methods.Comment: Accepted for the Third Workshop on Deep Learning for Recommender
Systems - DLRS 2018, October 02-07, 2018, Vancouver, Canada.
https://recsys.acm.org/recsys18/dlrs
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