K. Sun, T. Qian, Chenliang Li, Xuan Ma, Qing Li, Ming Zhong, Yuanyuan Zhu, Mengchi Liu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Point-of-Interest (POI) transition behaviors could hold absolute sparsity and relative sparsity very differently for different cities. Hence, it is intuitive to transfer knowledge across cities to alleviate those data sparsity and imbalance problems for next POI recommendation. Recently, pre-training over a large-scale dataset has achieved great success in many relevant fields, like computer vision and natural language processing. By devising various self-supervised objectives, pre-training models can produce more robust representations for downstream tasks. However, it is not trivial to directly adopt such existing pre-training techniques for next POI recommendation, due to the lacking of common semantic objects (users or items) across different cities. Thus in this paper, we tackle such a new research problem of pre-training across different cities for next POI recommendation. Specifically, to overcome the key challenge that different cities do not share any common object, we propose a novel pre-training model named CATUS, by transferring the category-level universal transition knowledge over different cities. Firstly, we build two self-supervised objectives in CATUS: next category prediction and next POI prediction, to obtain the universal transition-knowledge across different cities and POIs. Then, we design a category-transition oriented sampler on the data level and an implicit and explicit transfer strategy on the encoder level to enhance this transfer process. At the fine-tuning stage, we propose a distance oriented sampler to better align the POI representations into the local context of each city. Extensive experiments on two large datasets consisting of four cities demonstrate the superiority of our proposed CATUS over the state-of-the-art alternatives. The code and datasets are available at https://github.com/NLPWM-WHU/CATUS.
期刊介绍:
Transactions on the Web (TWEB) is a journal publishing refereed articles reporting the results of research on Web content, applications, use, and related enabling technologies. Topics in the scope of TWEB include but are not limited to the following: Browsers and Web Interfaces; Electronic Commerce; Electronic Publishing; Hypertext and Hypermedia; Semantic Web; Web Engineering; Web Services; and Service-Oriented Computing XML.
In addition, papers addressing the intersection of the following broader technologies with the Web are also in scope: Accessibility; Business Services Education; Knowledge Management and Representation; Mobility and pervasive computing; Performance and scalability; Recommender systems; Searching, Indexing, Classification, Retrieval and Querying, Data Mining and Analysis; Security and Privacy; and User Interfaces.
Papers discussing specific Web technologies, applications, content generation and management and use are within scope. Also, papers describing novel applications of the web as well as papers on the underlying technologies are welcome.