Graph Heterogeneous Multi-Relational Recommendation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v35i5.16515Keywords:
Recommender Systems & Collaborative FilteringAbstract
Traditional studies on recommender systems usually leverage only one type of user behaviors (the optimization target, such as purchase), despite the fact that users also generate a large number of various types of interaction data (e.g., view, click, add-to-cart, etc). Generally, these heterogeneous multi-relational data provide well-structured information and can be used for high-quality recommendation. Early efforts towards leveraging these heterogeneous data fail to capture the high-hop structure of user-item interactions, which are unable to make full use of them and may only achieve constrained recommendation performance. In this work, we propose a new multi-relational recommendation model named Graph Heterogeneous Collaborative Filtering (GHCF). To explore the high-hop heterogeneous user-item interactions, we take the advantages of Graph Convolutional Network (GCN) and further improve it to jointly embed both representations of nodes (users and items) and relations for multi-relational prediction. Moreover, to fully utilize the whole heterogeneous data, we perform the advanced efficient non-sampling optimization under a multi-task learning framework. Experimental results on two public benchmarks show that GHCF significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art recommendation methods, especially for cold-start users who have few primary item interactions. Further analysis verifies the importance of the proposed embedding propagation for modelling high-hop heterogeneous user-item interactions, showing the rationality and effectiveness of GHCF. Our implementation has been released (https://github.com/chenchongthu/GHCF).Downloads
Published
2021-05-18
How to Cite
Chen, C., Ma, W., Zhang, M., Wang, Z., He, X., Wang, C., Liu, Y., & Ma, S. (2021). Graph Heterogeneous Multi-Relational Recommendation. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 35(5), 3958-3966. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v35i5.16515
Issue
Section
AAAI Technical Track on Data Mining and Knowledge Management