Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

skip to main content
Volume 1, Issue 4December 2023
Reflects downloads up to 16 Dec 2024Bibliometrics
Skip Table Of Content Section
research-article
Graph Learning Augmented Heterogeneous Graph Neural Network for Social Recommendation
Article No.: 16, Pages 1–22https://doi.org/10.1145/3610407

Social recommendation based on social network has achieved great success in improving the performance of the recommendation system. Since social network (user-user relations) and user-item interactions are both naturally represented as graph-structured ...

research-article
Public Access
Deconfounded Causal Collaborative Filtering
Article No.: 17, Pages 1–25https://doi.org/10.1145/3606035

Recommender systems may be confounded by various types of confounding factors (also called confounders) that may lead to inaccurate recommendations and sacrificed recommendation performance. Current approaches to solving the problem usually design each ...

SECTION: Highlights of ACM RecSYS '21
research-article
Open Access
Examining the User Evaluation of Multi-List Recommender Interfaces in the Context of Healthy Recipe Choices
Article No.: 18, Pages 1–31https://doi.org/10.1145/3581930

Multi-list recommender systems have become widespread in entertainment and e-commerce applications. Yet, extensive user evaluation research is missing. Since most content is optimized toward a user’s current preferences, this may be problematic in ...

research-article
Open Access
KGFlex: Efficient Recommendation with Sparse Feature Factorization and Knowledge Graphs
Article No.: 19, Pages 1–30https://doi.org/10.1145/3588901

Collaborative filtering models have undoubtedly dominated the scene of recommender systems in recent years. However, due to the little use of content information, they narrowly focus on accuracy, disregarding a higher degree of personalization. Meanwhile, ...

SECTION: SIGIR Extended Papers '22
research-article
Open Access
Learning Hierarchical Spatial Tasks with Visiting Relations for Next POI Recommendation
Article No.: 20, Pages 1–26https://doi.org/10.1145/3610584

Sparsity is an established problem for the next Point-of-Interest (POI) recommendation task, where it hinders effective learning of user preferences from the User-POI matrix. However, learning multiple hierarchically related spatial tasks, and visiting ...

Subjects

Comments

Please enable JavaScript to view thecomments powered by Disqus.