11,570 research outputs found
Is Meta-Learning the Right Approach for the Cold-Start Problem in Recommender Systems?
Recommender systems have become fundamental building blocks of modern online
products and services, and have a substantial impact on user experience. In the
past few years, deep learning methods have attracted a lot of research, and are
now heavily used in modern real-world recommender systems. Nevertheless,
dealing with recommendations in the cold-start setting, e.g., when a user has
done limited interactions in the system, is a problem that remains far from
solved. Meta-learning techniques, and in particular optimization-based
meta-learning, have recently become the most popular approaches in the academic
research literature for tackling the cold-start problem in deep learning models
for recommender systems. However, current meta-learning approaches are not
practical for real-world recommender systems, which have billions of users and
items, and strict latency requirements. In this paper we show that it is
possible to obtaining similar, or higher, performance on commonly used
benchmarks for the cold-start problem without using meta-learning techniques.
In more detail, we show that, when tuned correctly, standard and widely adopted
deep learning models perform just as well as newer meta-learning models. We
further show that an extremely simple modular approach using common
representation learning techniques, can perform comparably to meta-learning
techniques specifically designed for the cold-start setting while being much
more easily deployable in real-world applications
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
Privacy and Fairness in Recommender Systems via Adversarial Training of User Representations
Latent factor models for recommender systems represent users and items as low
dimensional vectors. Privacy risks of such systems have previously been studied
mostly in the context of recovery of personal information in the form of usage
records from the training data. However, the user representations themselves
may be used together with external data to recover private user information
such as gender and age. In this paper we show that user vectors calculated by a
common recommender system can be exploited in this way. We propose the
privacy-adversarial framework to eliminate such leakage of private information,
and study the trade-off between recommender performance and leakage both
theoretically and empirically using a benchmark dataset. An advantage of the
proposed method is that it also helps guarantee fairness of results, since all
implicit knowledge of a set of attributes is scrubbed from the representations
used by the model, and thus can't enter into the decision making. We discuss
further applications of this method towards the generation of deeper and more
insightful recommendations.Comment: International Conference on Pattern Recognition and Method
Deep Learning based Recommender System: A Survey and New Perspectives
With the ever-growing volume of online information, recommender systems have
been an effective strategy to overcome such information overload. The utility
of recommender systems cannot be overstated, given its widespread adoption in
many web applications, along with its potential impact to ameliorate many
problems related to over-choice. In recent years, deep learning has garnered
considerable interest in many research fields such as computer vision and
natural language processing, owing not only to stellar performance but also the
attractive property of learning feature representations from scratch. The
influence of deep learning is also pervasive, recently demonstrating its
effectiveness when applied to information retrieval and recommender systems
research. Evidently, the field of deep learning in recommender system is
flourishing. This article aims to provide a comprehensive review of recent
research efforts on deep learning based recommender systems. More concretely,
we provide and devise a taxonomy of deep learning based recommendation models,
along with providing a comprehensive summary of the state-of-the-art. Finally,
we expand on current trends and provide new perspectives pertaining to this new
exciting development of the field.Comment: The paper has been accepted by ACM Computing Surveys.
https://doi.acm.org/10.1145/328502
Whole-Chain Recommendations
With the recent prevalence of Reinforcement Learning (RL), there have been
tremendous interests in developing RL-based recommender systems. In practical
recommendation sessions, users will sequentially access multiple scenarios,
such as the entrance pages and the item detail pages, and each scenario has its
specific characteristics. However, the majority of existing RL-based
recommender systems focus on optimizing one strategy for all scenarios or
separately optimizing each strategy, which could lead to sub-optimal overall
performance. In this paper, we study the recommendation problem with multiple
(consecutive) scenarios, i.e., whole-chain recommendations. We propose a
multi-agent RL-based approach (DeepChain), which can capture the sequential
correlation among different scenarios and jointly optimize multiple
recommendation strategies. To be specific, all recommender agents (RAs) share
the same memory of users' historical behaviors, and they work collaboratively
to maximize the overall reward of a session. Note that optimizing multiple
recommendation strategies jointly faces two challenges in the existing
model-free RL model - (i) it requires huge amounts of user behavior data, and
(ii) the distribution of reward (users' feedback) are extremely unbalanced. In
this paper, we introduce model-based RL techniques to reduce the training data
requirement and execute more accurate strategy updates. The experimental
results based on a real e-commerce platform demonstrate the effectiveness of
the proposed framework.Comment: 29th ACM International Conference on Information and Knowledge
Managemen
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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