Modeling Sequences as Distributions with Uncertainty for Sequential Recommendation
This work addresses the cold-start problem in sequential recommendation for users and items by incorporating uncertainty into sequence modeling, representing an incremental improvement over existing deterministic methods.
The authors tackled the problem of sequential recommendation by modeling sequences and items as distributions with uncertainty to capture stochastic user interests, resulting in a method that significantly outperforms state-of-the-art techniques and effectively alleviates cold-start issues on three benchmark datasets.
The sequential patterns within the user interactions are pivotal for representing the user's preference and capturing latent relationships among items. The recent advancements of sequence modeling by Transformers advocate the community to devise more effective encoders for the sequential recommendation. Most existing sequential methods assume users are deterministic. However, item-item transitions might fluctuate significantly in several item aspects and exhibit randomness of user interests. This \textit{stochastic characteristics} brings up a solid demand to include uncertainties in representing sequences and items. Additionally, modeling sequences and items with uncertainties expands users' and items' interaction spaces, thus further alleviating cold-start problems. In this work, we propose a Distribution-based Transformer for Sequential Recommendation (DT4SR), which injects uncertainties into sequential modeling. We use Elliptical Gaussian distributions to describe items and sequences with uncertainty. We describe the uncertainty in items and sequences as Elliptical Gaussian distribution. And we adopt Wasserstein distance to measure the similarity between distributions. We devise two novel Trans-formers for modeling mean and covariance, which guarantees the positive-definite property of distributions. The proposed method significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art methods. The experiments on three benchmark datasets also demonstrate its effectiveness in alleviating cold-start issues. The code is available inhttps://github.com/DyGRec/DT4SR.