VLM4Rec: Multimodal Semantic Representation for Recommendation with Large Vision-Language Models
This work addresses the challenge of aligning item content with user preferences in recommendation systems, offering a practical solution for enhancing accuracy in e-commerce or content platforms, though it is incremental in its approach.
The paper tackles the problem of multimodal recommendation by proposing a framework that uses large vision-language models to ground item images into semantic descriptions, improving recommendation performance over raw visual features and fusion-based methods across multiple datasets.
Multimodal recommendation is commonly framed as a feature fusion problem, where textual and visual signals are combined to better model user preference. However, the effectiveness of multimodal recommendation may depend not only on how modalities are fused, but also on whether item content is represented in a semantic space aligned with preference matching. This issue is particularly important because raw visual features often preserve appearance similarity, while user decisions are typically driven by higher-level semantic factors such as style, material, and usage context. Motivated by this observation, we propose LVLM-grounded Multimodal Semantic Representation for Recommendation (VLM4Rec), a lightweight framework that organizes multimodal item content through semantic alignment rather than direct feature fusion. VLM4Rec first uses a large vision-language model to ground each item image into an explicit natural-language description, and then encodes the grounded semantics into dense item representations for preference-oriented retrieval. Recommendation is subsequently performed through a simple profile-based semantic matching mechanism over historical item embeddings, yielding a practical offline-online decomposition. Extensive experiments on multiple multimodal recommendation datasets show that VLM4Rec consistently improves performance over raw visual features and several fusion-based alternatives, suggesting that representation quality may matter more than fusion complexity in this setting. The code is released at https://github.com/tyvalencia/enhancing-mm-rec-sys.