Explicitly Exploiting Implicit User and Item Relations in Graph Convolutional Network (GCN) for Recommendation
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Published:2024-07-17
Issue:14
Volume:13
Page:2811
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ISSN:2079-9292
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Container-title:Electronics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Electronics
Author:
Xiao Bowen1ORCID, Chen Deng1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Wuhan Institute of Technology, 19 Liufang Avenue, Jiangxia District, Wuhan 430079, China
Abstract
Most existing collaborative filtering-based recommender systems rely solely on available user–item interactions for user and item representation learning. Their performance often suffers significantly when interactions are sparse, as limited user and item interactions are insufficient for learning robust representations. To address this issue, recent research has explored additional information between users and items by leveraging the user–item bipartite graph. However, these methods have not fully exploited high-order neighborhood information, primarily using sampled interactions to enrich training data rather than integrating this information directly into representation learning. In this paper, we propose a novel model, EIR-GCN (Embedding Integration with Relational Graph Convolutional Network), which directly incorporates various types of collaborative relations, such as user–user and item–item interactions, into the embedding function for user preference modeling. Specifically, our model employs advanced graph convolutional network (GCN) techniques to integrate user–item, user–user, and item–item relations for comprehensive representation learning. EIR-GCN initially selects the most influential second-order neighbors from the user–item bipartite graph to form user–user and item–item connections. With these enriched connections, a message-passing method is adopted to learn node representations by aggregating messages from directly linked nodes, including first-order item neighbors and selected second-order user neighbors. Extensive experiments on several public datasets demonstrate that EIR-GCN outperforms strong baselines, including recent GCN-based models and those exploiting high-order information. Our results show that EIR-GCN achieves state-of-the-art performance and effectively addresses the sparsity issue, highlighting its robustness and efficacy in recommendation tasks.
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