2,818 research outputs found
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
Ask the GRU: Multi-Task Learning for Deep Text Recommendations
In a variety of application domains the content to be recommended to users is
associated with text. This includes research papers, movies with associated
plot summaries, news articles, blog posts, etc. Recommendation approaches based
on latent factor models can be extended naturally to leverage text by employing
an explicit mapping from text to factors. This enables recommendations for new,
unseen content, and may generalize better, since the factors for all items are
produced by a compactly-parametrized model. Previous work has used topic models
or averages of word embeddings for this mapping. In this paper we present a
method leveraging deep recurrent neural networks to encode the text sequence
into a latent vector, specifically gated recurrent units (GRUs) trained
end-to-end on the collaborative filtering task. For the task of scientific
paper recommendation, this yields models with significantly higher accuracy. In
cold-start scenarios, we beat the previous state-of-the-art, all of which
ignore word order. Performance is further improved by multi-task learning,
where the text encoder network is trained for a combination of content
recommendation and item metadata prediction. This regularizes the collaborative
filtering model, ameliorating the problem of sparsity of the observed rating
matrix.Comment: 8 page
Neural Collaborative Filtering
In recent years, deep neural networks have yielded immense success on speech
recognition, computer vision and natural language processing. However, the
exploration of deep neural networks on recommender systems has received
relatively less scrutiny. In this work, we strive to develop techniques based
on neural networks to tackle the key problem in recommendation -- collaborative
filtering -- on the basis of implicit feedback. Although some recent work has
employed deep learning for recommendation, they primarily used it to model
auxiliary information, such as textual descriptions of items and acoustic
features of musics. When it comes to model the key factor in collaborative
filtering -- the interaction between user and item features, they still
resorted to matrix factorization and applied an inner product on the latent
features of users and items. By replacing the inner product with a neural
architecture that can learn an arbitrary function from data, we present a
general framework named NCF, short for Neural network-based Collaborative
Filtering. NCF is generic and can express and generalize matrix factorization
under its framework. To supercharge NCF modelling with non-linearities, we
propose to leverage a multi-layer perceptron to learn the user-item interaction
function. Extensive experiments on two real-world datasets show significant
improvements of our proposed NCF framework over the state-of-the-art methods.
Empirical evidence shows that using deeper layers of neural networks offers
better recommendation performance.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
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