96.5IRApr 28
From Local Indices to Global Identifiers: Generative Reranking for Recommender Systems via Global Action SpacePengyue Jia, Xiaobei Wang, Yingyi Zhang et al.
In modern recommender systems, list-wise reranking serves as a critical phase within the multi-stage pipeline, finalizing the exposed item sequence and directly impacting user satisfaction by modeling complex intra-list item dependencies. Existing methods typically formulate this task as selecting indices from the local input list. However, this approach suffers from a semantically inconsistent action space: the same output neuron (logits) represents different items across different samples, preventing the model from establishing a stable, intrinsic understanding of the items. To address this, we propose GloRank (Global Action Space Ranker), a generative framework that shifts reranking from selecting local indices to generating global identifiers. Specifically, we represent items as sequences of discrete tokens and reformulate reranking as a token generation task. This design effectively decouples the scoring mechanism from the variable input order, ensuring that items are evaluated against a consistent global standard. We further enhance this with a two-stage optimization pipeline: a supervised pre-training phase to initialize the model with high-quality demonstrations, followed by a reinforcement learning-based post-training phase to directly maximize list-wise utility. Extensive experiments on two public benchmarks and a large-scale industrial dataset, coupled with online A/B tests, demonstrate that GloRank consistently outperforms state-of-the-art baselines and achieves superior robustness in cold-start scenarios.
SIApr 21, 2025Code
VLM as Policy: Common-Law Content Moderation Framework for Short Video PlatformXingyu Lu, Tianke Zhang, Chang Meng et al.
Exponentially growing short video platforms (SVPs) face significant challenges in moderating content detrimental to users' mental health, particularly for minors. The dissemination of such content on SVPs can lead to catastrophic societal consequences. Although substantial efforts have been dedicated to moderating such content, existing methods suffer from critical limitations: (1) Manual review is prone to human bias and incurs high operational costs. (2) Automated methods, though efficient, lack nuanced content understanding, resulting in lower accuracy. (3) Industrial moderation regulations struggle to adapt to rapidly evolving trends due to long update cycles. In this paper, we annotate the first SVP content moderation benchmark with authentic user/reviewer feedback to fill the absence of benchmark in this field. Then we evaluate various methods on the benchmark to verify the existence of the aforementioned limitations. We further propose our common-law content moderation framework named KuaiMod to address these challenges. KuaiMod consists of three components: training data construction, offline adaptation, and online deployment & refinement. Leveraging large vision language model (VLM) and Chain-of-Thought (CoT) reasoning, KuaiMod adequately models video toxicity based on sparse user feedback and fosters dynamic moderation policy with rapid update speed and high accuracy. Offline experiments and large-scale online A/B test demonstrates the superiority of KuaiMod: KuaiMod achieves the best moderation performance on our benchmark. The deployment of KuaiMod reduces the user reporting rate by 20% and its application in video recommendation increases both Daily Active User (DAU) and APP Usage Time (AUT) on several Kuaishou scenarios. We have open-sourced our benchmark at https://kuaimod.github.io.
75.2IRMay 11
UniRank: Unified List-wise Reranking via Confidence-Ordered DenoisingPengyue Jia, Hailan Yang, Shuchang Liu et al.
List-wise reranking arranges a request-specific pool of candidate items into an ordered slate that maximizes user satisfaction. Existing generative rerankers fall into two paradigms: Autoregressive (AR) rerankers construct the slate left to right and capture inter-item dependencies in the exposure list, but they suffer from error propagation because early mistakes affect subsequent slots. Non-autoregressive (NAR) rerankers predict all slots in parallel and avoid error propagation, but they weaken inter-item interaction modeling under a slot independence assumption. This raises a central question: is there a unified architecture that combines the strengths of both paradigms and delivers stronger reranking performance? We answer this question with UniRank, a unified list-wise reranking framework whose inference time variants recover AR and NAR rerankers as special cases. UniRank integrates bidirectional slate modeling into an iterative denoising process and fills the most confident slot at each step. To instantiate this framework for reranking, we introduce the Task Grounded Diffusion Interface (TGD), which performs denoising at the item level and restricts prediction to the request-specific candidate pool. TGD aggregates each item's semantic tokens into a single item embedding and scores each slot directly against the candidate pool. Experiments on Amazon Books, MovieLens-1M, and an industrial short video dataset show that UniRank consistently outperforms state-of-the-art baselines. Online A/B tests on a real-world industrial platform further validate its effectiveness, yielding significant improvements of +0.159% in user average app-time and +1.016% in share-rate.
48.1IRApr 1
Denoising Neural Reranker for Recommender SystemsWenyu Mao, Shuchang Liu, Hailan Yang et al.
For multi-stage recommenders in industry, a user request would first trigger a simple and efficient retriever module that selects and ranks a list of relevant items, then the recommender calls a slower but more sophisticated reranking model that refines the item list exposure to the user. To consistently optimize the two-stage retrieval reranking framework, most efforts have focused on learning reranker-aware retrievers. In contrast, there has been limited work on how to achieve a retriever-aware reranker. In this work, we provide evidence that the retriever scores from the previous stage are informative signals that have been underexplored. Specifically, we first empirically show that the reranking task under the two-stage framework is naturally a noise reduction problem on the retriever scores, and theoretically show the limitations of naive utilization techniques of the retriever scores. Following this notion, we derive an adversarial framework DNR that associates the denoising reranker with a carefully designed noise generation module. The resulting DNR solution extends the conventional score error minimization loss with three augmented objectives, including: 1) a denoising objective that aims to denoise the noisy retriever scores to align with the user feedback; 2) an adversarial retriever score generation objective that improves the exploration in the retriever score space; and 3) a distribution regularization term that aims to align the distribution of generated noisy retriever scores with the real ones. We conduct extensive experiments on three public datasets and an industrial recommender system, together with analytical support, to validate the effectiveness of the proposed DNR.