1,040 research outputs found
Neural Ranking Models with Weak Supervision
Despite the impressive improvements achieved by unsupervised deep neural
networks in computer vision and NLP tasks, such improvements have not yet been
observed in ranking for information retrieval. The reason may be the complexity
of the ranking problem, as it is not obvious how to learn from queries and
documents when no supervised signal is available. Hence, in this paper, we
propose to train a neural ranking model using weak supervision, where labels
are obtained automatically without human annotators or any external resources
(e.g., click data). To this aim, we use the output of an unsupervised ranking
model, such as BM25, as a weak supervision signal. We further train a set of
simple yet effective ranking models based on feed-forward neural networks. We
study their effectiveness under various learning scenarios (point-wise and
pair-wise models) and using different input representations (i.e., from
encoding query-document pairs into dense/sparse vectors to using word embedding
representation). We train our networks using tens of millions of training
instances and evaluate it on two standard collections: a homogeneous news
collection(Robust) and a heterogeneous large-scale web collection (ClueWeb).
Our experiments indicate that employing proper objective functions and letting
the networks to learn the input representation based on weakly supervised data
leads to impressive performance, with over 13% and 35% MAP improvements over
the BM25 model on the Robust and the ClueWeb collections. Our findings also
suggest that supervised neural ranking models can greatly benefit from
pre-training on large amounts of weakly labeled data that can be easily
obtained from unsupervised IR models.Comment: In proceedings of The 40th International ACM SIGIR Conference on
Research and Development in Information Retrieval (SIGIR2017
Neural Collaborative Ranking
Recommender systems are aimed at generating a personalized ranked list of
items that an end user might be interested in. With the unprecedented success
of deep learning in computer vision and speech recognition, recently it has
been a hot topic to bridge the gap between recommender systems and deep neural
network. And deep learning methods have been shown to achieve state-of-the-art
on many recommendation tasks. For example, a recent model, NeuMF, first
projects users and items into some shared low-dimensional latent feature space,
and then employs neural nets to model the interaction between the user and item
latent features to obtain state-of-the-art performance on the recommendation
tasks. NeuMF assumes that the non-interacted items are inherent negative and
uses negative sampling to relax this assumption. In this paper, we examine an
alternative approach which does not assume that the non-interacted items are
necessarily negative, just that they are less preferred than interacted items.
Specifically, we develop a new classification strategy based on the widely used
pairwise ranking assumption. We combine our classification strategy with the
recently proposed neural collaborative filtering framework, and propose a
general collaborative ranking framework called Neural Network based
Collaborative Ranking (NCR). We resort to a neural network architecture to
model a user's pairwise preference between items, with the belief that neural
network will effectively capture the latent structure of latent factors. The
experimental results on two real-world datasets show the superior performance
of our models in comparison with several state-of-the-art approaches.Comment: Proceedings of the 2018 ACM on Conference on Information and
Knowledge Managemen
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