Dual Intent Enhanced Graph Neural Network for Session-based New Item Recommendation

May 10, 2023 ยท Entered Twilight ยท ๐Ÿ› The Web Conference

๐Ÿ’ค TWILIGHT: Eternal Rest
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Repo contents: README.md, datasets, pytorch_code

Authors Di Jin, Luzhi Wang, Yizhen Zheng, Guojie Song, Fei Jiang, Xiang Li, Wei Lin, Shirui Pan arXiv ID 2305.05848 Category cs.IR: Information Retrieval Cross-listed cs.AI Citations 43 Venue The Web Conference Repository https://github.com/Ee1s/NirGNN โญ 20 Last Checked 1 month ago
Abstract
Recommender systems are essential to various fields, e.g., e-commerce, e-learning, and streaming media. At present, graph neural networks (GNNs) for session-based recommendations normally can only recommend items existing in users' historical sessions. As a result, these GNNs have difficulty recommending items that users have never interacted with (new items), which leads to a phenomenon of information cocoon. Therefore, it is necessary to recommend new items to users. As there is no interaction between new items and users, we cannot include new items when building session graphs for GNN session-based recommender systems. Thus, it is challenging to recommend new items for users when using GNN-based methods. We regard this challenge as '\textbf{G}NN \textbf{S}ession-based \textbf{N}ew \textbf{I}tem \textbf{R}ecommendation (GSNIR)'. To solve this problem, we propose a dual-intent enhanced graph neural network for it. Due to the fact that new items are not tied to historical sessions, the users' intent is difficult to predict. We design a dual-intent network to learn user intent from an attention mechanism and the distribution of historical data respectively, which can simulate users' decision-making process in interacting with a new item. To solve the challenge that new items cannot be learned by GNNs, inspired by zero-shot learning (ZSL), we infer the new item representation in GNN space by using their attributes. By outputting new item probabilities, which contain recommendation scores of the corresponding items, the new items with higher scores are recommended to users. Experiments on two representative real-world datasets show the superiority of our proposed method. The case study from the real-world verifies interpretability benefits brought by the dual-intent module and the new item reasoning module. The code is available at Github: https://github.com/Ee1s/NirGNN
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