Affiliation:
1. College of Physical Education and Sports, Beijing Normal University, Haidian District, Beijing 100875, China
2. Kehua School, Nanshan Foreign Language School, Shenzhen, Guangzhou 518057, China
Abstract
In this paper, a comprehensive quantitative and biological neural network optimization model of sports industry structure is thoroughly studied and analyzed using knowledge graphs. To address the problems of poor performance interpretability deficiency of knowledge graph-based recommendation methods in the face of relational sparse graphs, a pretraining-based implicit characterization algorithm strategy is proposed for the recall stage, which can solve the problems of difficulty in going online and high delay in the recall stage of the recommendation system while improving the accuracy, and not only this can be applied in the recall stage, but also the sorting and postsorting modules can be used as features. To study the relationship between signaling activity and energy metabolism of pyramidal neurons, an empirical model of the synaptic vesicle cycle is proposed to simulate the synaptic transmission process, the role played by energy metabolism in synaptic transmission is studied from the perspective of feedback control, and the quantitative relationship between neuronal pulse discharge frequency, energy consumption, and information quantity in dendritic integration is analyzed using the cable theory and atrial chamber model. It was found that, when
, the chaotic region shrinks and eventually disappears with the increase of the memory factor
; however, when
is used, chaos is recreated and the chaotic area gradually increases with the increase of the memory factor
. This paper conducts comparative experiments on data sets in the recommendation domain and verifies that the proposed model and the feature intersection module can effectively perform feature interaction between items and entities, thus enhancing the recommendation effect.
Funder
National Development and Reform Commission
Subject
General Mathematics,General Medicine,General Neuroscience,General Computer Science