Graph Retrieval-Augmented LLM for Conversational Recommendation Systems

March 09, 2025 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› Pacific-Asia Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining

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Authors Zhangchi Qiu, Linhao Luo, Zicheng Zhao, Shirui Pan, Alan Wee-Chung Liew arXiv ID 2503.06430 Category cs.CL: Computation & Language Cross-listed cs.AI, cs.IR Citations 7 Venue Pacific-Asia Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Conversational Recommender Systems (CRSs) have emerged as a transformative paradigm for offering personalized recommendations through natural language dialogue. However, they face challenges with knowledge sparsity, as users often provide brief, incomplete preference statements. While recent methods have integrated external knowledge sources to mitigate this, they still struggle with semantic understanding and complex preference reasoning. Recent Large Language Models (LLMs) demonstrate promising capabilities in natural language understanding and reasoning, showing significant potential for CRSs. Nevertheless, due to the lack of domain knowledge, existing LLM-based CRSs either produce hallucinated recommendations or demand expensive domain-specific training, which largely limits their applicability. In this work, we present G-CRS (Graph Retrieval-Augmented Large Language Model for Conversational Recommender Systems), a novel training-free framework that combines graph retrieval-augmented generation and in-context learning to enhance LLMs' recommendation capabilities. Specifically, G-CRS employs a two-stage retrieve-and-recommend architecture, where a GNN-based graph reasoner first identifies candidate items, followed by Personalized PageRank exploration to jointly discover potential items and similar user interactions. These retrieved contexts are then transformed into structured prompts for LLM reasoning, enabling contextually grounded recommendations without task-specific training. Extensive experiments on two public datasets show that G-CRS achieves superior recommendation performance compared to existing methods without requiring task-specific training.
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