25,421 research outputs found
Attentive Aspect Modeling for Review-aware Recommendation
In recent years, many studies extract aspects from user reviews and integrate
them with ratings for improving the recommendation performance. The common
aspects mentioned in a user's reviews and a product's reviews indicate indirect
connections between the user and product. However, these aspect-based methods
suffer from two problems. First, the common aspects are usually very sparse,
which is caused by the sparsity of user-product interactions and the diversity
of individual users' vocabularies. Second, a user's interests on aspects could
be different with respect to different products, which are usually assumed to
be static in existing methods. In this paper, we propose an Attentive
Aspect-based Recommendation Model (AARM) to tackle these challenges. For the
first problem, to enrich the aspect connections between user and product,
besides common aspects, AARM also models the interactions between synonymous
and similar aspects. For the second problem, a neural attention network which
simultaneously considers user, product and aspect information is constructed to
capture a user's attention towards aspects when examining different products.
Extensive quantitative and qualitative experiments show that AARM can
effectively alleviate the two aforementioned problems and significantly
outperforms several state-of-the-art recommendation methods on top-N
recommendation task.Comment: Camera-ready manuscript for TOI
Towards Question-based Recommender Systems
Conversational and question-based recommender systems have gained increasing
attention in recent years, with users enabled to converse with the system and
better control recommendations. Nevertheless, research in the field is still
limited, compared to traditional recommender systems. In this work, we propose
a novel Question-based recommendation method, Qrec, to assist users to find
items interactively, by answering automatically constructed and algorithmically
chosen questions. Previous conversational recommender systems ask users to
express their preferences over items or item facets. Our model, instead, asks
users to express their preferences over descriptive item features. The model is
first trained offline by a novel matrix factorization algorithm, and then
iteratively updates the user and item latent factors online by a closed-form
solution based on the user answers. Meanwhile, our model infers the underlying
user belief and preferences over items to learn an optimal question-asking
strategy by using Generalized Binary Search, so as to ask a sequence of
questions to the user. Our experimental results demonstrate that our proposed
matrix factorization model outperforms the traditional Probabilistic Matrix
Factorization model. Further, our proposed Qrec model can greatly improve the
performance of state-of-the-art baselines, and it is also effective in the case
of cold-start user and item recommendations.Comment: accepted by SIGIR 202
A Survey on Bayesian Deep Learning
A comprehensive artificial intelligence system needs to not only perceive the
environment with different `senses' (e.g., seeing and hearing) but also infer
the world's conditional (or even causal) relations and corresponding
uncertainty. The past decade has seen major advances in many perception tasks
such as visual object recognition and speech recognition using deep learning
models. For higher-level inference, however, probabilistic graphical models
with their Bayesian nature are still more powerful and flexible. In recent
years, Bayesian deep learning has emerged as a unified probabilistic framework
to tightly integrate deep learning and Bayesian models. In this general
framework, the perception of text or images using deep learning can boost the
performance of higher-level inference and in turn, the feedback from the
inference process is able to enhance the perception of text or images. This
survey provides a comprehensive introduction to Bayesian deep learning and
reviews its recent applications on recommender systems, topic models, control,
etc. Besides, we also discuss the relationship and differences between Bayesian
deep learning and other related topics such as Bayesian treatment of neural
networks.Comment: To appear in ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR) 202
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