Measure Domain's Gap: A Similar Domain Selection Principle for Multi-Domain Recommendation
Yi Wen, Yue Liu, Derong Xu, Huishi Luo, Pengyue Jia, Yiqing Wu, Siwei Wang, Ke Liang, Maolin Wang, Yiqi Wang, Fuzhen Zhuang, Xiangyu Zhao

TL;DR
This paper introduces a dynamic domain selection principle for multi-domain recommendation that models domain relationships to prevent negative transfer and improve recommendation accuracy.
Contribution
It proposes a novel prototype-based domain distance measure and a dynamic selection method to effectively choose relevant domains for transfer learning in MDR.
Findings
Improves recommendation performance by avoiding negative transfer.
Effectively models complex domain relationships.
Demonstrates superior results on three datasets.
Abstract
Multi-Domain Recommendation (MDR) achieves the desirable recommendation performance by effectively utilizing the transfer information across different domains. Despite the great success, most existing MDR methods adopt a single structure to transfer complex domain-shared knowledge. However, the beneficial transferring information should vary across different domains. When there is knowledge conflict between domains or a domain is of poor quality, unselectively leveraging information from all domains will lead to a serious Negative Transfer Problem (NTP). Therefore, how to effectively model the complex transfer relationships between domains to avoid NTP is still a direction worth exploring. To address these issues, we propose a simple and dynamic Similar Domain Selection Principle (SDSP) for multi-domain recommendation in this paper. SDSP presents the initial exploration of selecting…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Code & Models
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsRecommender Systems and Techniques
MethodsADaptive gradient method with the OPTimal convergence rate
