Contrastive Learning for Sequential Recommendation
This work addresses data sparsity for sequential recommender systems, offering an incremental improvement by integrating contrastive learning into existing frameworks.
The paper tackles the data sparsity problem in sequential recommendation by proposing CL4SRec, a multi-task model that combines traditional next item prediction with contrastive learning and data augmentation, achieving state-of-the-art performance on four public datasets.
Sequential recommendation methods play a crucial role in modern recommender systems because of their ability to capture a user's dynamic interest from her/his historical interactions. Despite their success, we argue that these approaches usually rely on the sequential prediction task to optimize the huge amounts of parameters. They usually suffer from the data sparsity problem, which makes it difficult for them to learn high-quality user representations. To tackle that, inspired by recent advances of contrastive learning techniques in the computer version, we propose a novel multi-task model called \textbf{C}ontrastive \textbf{L}earning for \textbf{S}equential \textbf{Rec}ommendation~(\textbf{CL4SRec}). CL4SRec not only takes advantage of the traditional next item prediction task but also utilizes the contrastive learning framework to derive self-supervision signals from the original user behavior sequences. Therefore, it can extract more meaningful user patterns and further encode the user representation effectively. In addition, we propose three data augmentation approaches to construct self-supervision signals. Extensive experiments on four public datasets demonstrate that CL4SRec achieves state-of-the-art performance over existing baselines by inferring better user representations.