IEEE transactions on neural networks and learning systems | 2021

Neural Time-Aware Sequential Recommendation by Jointly Modeling Preference Dynamics and Explicit Feature Couplings.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


In recommendation, both stationary and dynamic user preferences on items are embedded in the interactions between users and items (e.g., rating or clicking) within their contexts. Sequential recommender systems (SRSs) need to jointly involve such context-aware user-item interactions in terms of the couplings between the user and item features and sequential user actions on items over time. However, such joint modeling is non-trivial and significantly challenges the existing work on preference modeling, which either only models user-item interactions by latent factorization models but ignores user preference dynamics or only captures sequential user action patterns without involving user/item features and context factors and their coupling and influence on user actions. We propose a neural time-aware recommendation network (TARN) with a temporal context to jointly model 1) stationary user preferences by a feature interaction network and 2) user preference dynamics by a tailored convolutional network. The feature interaction network factorizes the pairwise couplings between non-zero features of users, items, and temporal context by the inner product of their feature embeddings while alleviating data sparsity issues. In the convolutional network, we introduce a convolutional layer with multiple filter widths to capture multi-fold sequential patterns, where an attentive average pooling (AAP) obtains significant and large-span feature combinations. To learn the preference dynamics, a novel temporal action embedding represents user actions by incorporating the embeddings of items and temporal context as the inputs of the convolutional network. The experiments on typical public data sets demonstrate that TARN outperforms state-of-the-art methods and show the necessity and contribution of involving time-aware preference dynamics and explicit user/item feature couplings in modeling and interpreting evolving user preferences.

Volume PP
Pages None
DOI 10.1109/TNNLS.2021.3069058
Language English
Journal IEEE transactions on neural networks and learning systems

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