11,504 research outputs found
Transfer Meets Hybrid: A Synthetic Approach for Cross-Domain Collaborative Filtering with Text
Collaborative filtering (CF) is the key technique for recommender systems
(RSs). CF exploits user-item behavior interactions (e.g., clicks) only and
hence suffers from the data sparsity issue. One research thread is to integrate
auxiliary information such as product reviews and news titles, leading to
hybrid filtering methods. Another thread is to transfer knowledge from other
source domains such as improving the movie recommendation with the knowledge
from the book domain, leading to transfer learning methods. In real-world life,
no single service can satisfy a user's all information needs. Thus it motivates
us to exploit both auxiliary and source information for RSs in this paper. We
propose a novel neural model to smoothly enable Transfer Meeting Hybrid (TMH)
methods for cross-domain recommendation with unstructured text in an end-to-end
manner. TMH attentively extracts useful content from unstructured text via a
memory module and selectively transfers knowledge from a source domain via a
transfer network. On two real-world datasets, TMH shows better performance in
terms of three ranking metrics by comparing with various baselines. We conduct
thorough analyses to understand how the text content and transferred knowledge
help the proposed model.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, a full version for the WWW 2019 short pape
Transfer Learning via Contextual Invariants for One-to-Many Cross-Domain Recommendation
The rapid proliferation of new users and items on the social web has
aggravated the gray-sheep user/long-tail item challenge in recommender systems.
Historically, cross-domain co-clustering methods have successfully leveraged
shared users and items across dense and sparse domains to improve inference
quality. However, they rely on shared rating data and cannot scale to multiple
sparse target domains (i.e., the one-to-many transfer setting). This, combined
with the increasing adoption of neural recommender architectures, motivates us
to develop scalable neural layer-transfer approaches for cross-domain learning.
Our key intuition is to guide neural collaborative filtering with
domain-invariant components shared across the dense and sparse domains,
improving the user and item representations learned in the sparse domains. We
leverage contextual invariances across domains to develop these shared modules,
and demonstrate that with user-item interaction context, we can learn-to-learn
informative representation spaces even with sparse interaction data. We show
the effectiveness and scalability of our approach on two public datasets and a
massive transaction dataset from Visa, a global payments technology company
(19% Item Recall, 3x faster vs. training separate models for each domain). Our
approach is applicable to both implicit and explicit feedback settings.Comment: SIGIR 202
Human-Machine Collaborative Optimization via Apprenticeship Scheduling
Coordinating agents to complete a set of tasks with intercoupled temporal and
resource constraints is computationally challenging, yet human domain experts
can solve these difficult scheduling problems using paradigms learned through
years of apprenticeship. A process for manually codifying this domain knowledge
within a computational framework is necessary to scale beyond the
``single-expert, single-trainee" apprenticeship model. However, human domain
experts often have difficulty describing their decision-making processes,
causing the codification of this knowledge to become laborious. We propose a
new approach for capturing domain-expert heuristics through a pairwise ranking
formulation. Our approach is model-free and does not require enumerating or
iterating through a large state space. We empirically demonstrate that this
approach accurately learns multifaceted heuristics on a synthetic data set
incorporating job-shop scheduling and vehicle routing problems, as well as on
two real-world data sets consisting of demonstrations of experts solving a
weapon-to-target assignment problem and a hospital resource allocation problem.
We also demonstrate that policies learned from human scheduling demonstration
via apprenticeship learning can substantially improve the efficiency of a
branch-and-bound search for an optimal schedule. We employ this human-machine
collaborative optimization technique on a variant of the weapon-to-target
assignment problem. We demonstrate that this technique generates solutions
substantially superior to those produced by human domain experts at a rate up
to 9.5 times faster than an optimization approach and can be applied to
optimally solve problems twice as complex as those solved by a human
demonstrator.Comment: Portions of this paper were published in the Proceedings of the
International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI) in 2016 and
in the Proceedings of Robotics: Science and Systems (RSS) in 2016. The paper
consists of 50 pages with 11 figures and 4 table
CoNet: Collaborative Cross Networks for Cross-Domain Recommendation
The cross-domain recommendation technique is an effective way of alleviating
the data sparse issue in recommender systems by leveraging the knowledge from
relevant domains. Transfer learning is a class of algorithms underlying these
techniques. In this paper, we propose a novel transfer learning approach for
cross-domain recommendation by using neural networks as the base model. In
contrast to the matrix factorization based cross-domain techniques, our method
is deep transfer learning, which can learn complex user-item interaction
relationships. We assume that hidden layers in two base networks are connected
by cross mappings, leading to the collaborative cross networks (CoNet). CoNet
enables dual knowledge transfer across domains by introducing cross connections
from one base network to another and vice versa. CoNet is achieved in
multi-layer feedforward networks by adding dual connections and joint loss
functions, which can be trained efficiently by back-propagation. The proposed
model is thoroughly evaluated on two large real-world datasets. It outperforms
baselines by relative improvements of 7.84\% in NDCG. We demonstrate the
necessity of adaptively selecting representations to transfer. Our model can
reduce tens of thousands training examples comparing with non-transfer methods
and still has the competitive performance with them.Comment: Deep transfer learning for recommender system
Structuring Wikipedia Articles with Section Recommendations
Sections are the building blocks of Wikipedia articles. They enhance
readability and can be used as a structured entry point for creating and
expanding articles. Structuring a new or already existing Wikipedia article
with sections is a hard task for humans, especially for newcomers or less
experienced editors, as it requires significant knowledge about how a
well-written article looks for each possible topic. Inspired by this need, the
present paper defines the problem of section recommendation for Wikipedia
articles and proposes several approaches for tackling it. Our systems can help
editors by recommending what sections to add to already existing or newly
created Wikipedia articles. Our basic paradigm is to generate recommendations
by sourcing sections from articles that are similar to the input article. We
explore several ways of defining similarity for this purpose (based on topic
modeling, collaborative filtering, and Wikipedia's category system). We use
both automatic and human evaluation approaches for assessing the performance of
our recommendation system, concluding that the category-based approach works
best, achieving precision@10 of about 80% in the human evaluation.Comment: SIGIR '18 camera-read
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