Lang Mei, Jiaxin Mao, Juan Hu, Naiqiang Tan, Hua Chai, Ji-rong Wen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Point-of-interest (POI) search is important for location-based services, such as navigation and online ride-hailing service. The goal of POI search is to find the most relevant destinations from a large-scale POI database given a text query. To improve the effectiveness and efficiency of POI search, most existing approaches are based on a multi-stage pipeline that consists of an efficiency-oriented retrieval stage and one or more effectiveness-oriented re-rank stages. In this paper, we focus on the first efficiency-oriented retrieval stage of the POI search. We first identify the limitations of existing first-stage POI retrieval models in capturing the semantic-geography relationship and modeling the fine-grained geographical context information. Then, we propose a Geo-Enhanced Dense Retrieval framework for POI search to alleviate the above problems. Specifically, the proposed framework leverages the capacity of pre-trained language models (e.g., BERT) and designs a pre-training approach to better model the semantic match between the query prefix and POIs. With the POI collection, we first perform a token-level pre-training task based on a geographical-sensitive masked language prediction, and design two retrieval-oriented pre-training tasks that link the address of each POI to its name and geo-location. With the user behavior logs collected from an online POI search system, we design two additional pre-training tasks based on users’ query reformulation behavior and the transitions between POIs. We also utilize a late-interaction network structure to model the fine-grained interactions between the text and geographical context information within an acceptable query latency. Extensive experiments on the real-world datasets collected from the Didichuxing application demonstrate that the proposed framework can achieve superior retrieval performance over existing first-stage POI retrieval methods.
期刊介绍:
The ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS) publishes papers on information retrieval (such as search engines, recommender systems) that contain:
new principled information retrieval models or algorithms with sound empirical validation;
observational, experimental and/or theoretical studies yielding new insights into information retrieval or information seeking;
accounts of applications of existing information retrieval techniques that shed light on the strengths and weaknesses of the techniques;
formalization of new information retrieval or information seeking tasks and of methods for evaluating the performance on those tasks;
development of content (text, image, speech, video, etc) analysis methods to support information retrieval and information seeking;
development of computational models of user information preferences and interaction behaviors;
creation and analysis of evaluation methodologies for information retrieval and information seeking; or
surveys of existing work that propose a significant synthesis.
The information retrieval scope of ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS) appeals to industry practitioners for its wealth of creative ideas, and to academic researchers for its descriptions of their colleagues'' work.