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Are we really making much progress? A worrying analysis of recent neural recommendation approaches

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TLDR
A systematic analysis of algorithmic proposals for top-n recommendation tasks that were presented at top-level research conferences in the last years sheds light on a number of potential problems in today's machine learning scholarship and calls for improved scientific practices in this area.
Abstract
Deep learning techniques have become the method of choice for researchers working on algorithmic aspects of recommender systems. With the strongly increased interest in machine learning in general, it has, as a result, become difficult to keep track of what represents the state-of-the-art at the moment, e.g., for top-n recommendation tasks. At the same time, several recent publications point out problems in today's research practice in applied machine learning, e.g., in terms of the reproducibility of the results or the choice of the baselines when proposing new models. In this work, we report the results of a systematic analysis of algorithmic proposals for top-n recommendation tasks. Specifically, we considered 18 algorithms that were presented at top-level research conferences in the last years. Only 7 of them could be reproduced with reasonable effort. For these methods, it however turned out that 6 of them can often be outperformed with comparably simple heuristic methods, e.g., based on nearest-neighbor or graph-based techniques. The remaining one clearly outperformed the baselines but did not consistently outperform a well-tuned non-neural linear ranking method. Overall, our work sheds light on a number of potential problems in today's machine learning scholarship and calls for improved scientific practices in this area.

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References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Item-based collaborative filtering recommendation algorithms

TL;DR: This paper analyzes item-based collaborative ltering techniques and suggests that item- based algorithms provide dramatically better performance than user-based algorithms, while at the same time providing better quality than the best available userbased algorithms.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Neural Collaborative Filtering

TL;DR: This work strives to develop techniques based on neural networks to tackle the key problem in recommendation --- collaborative filtering --- on the basis of implicit feedback, and presents a general framework named NCF, short for Neural network-based Collaborative Filtering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Amazon.com recommendations: item-to-item collaborative filtering

TL;DR: Item-to-item collaborative filtering (ITF) as mentioned in this paper is a popular recommendation algorithm for e-commerce Web sites that scales independently of the number of customers and number of items in the product catalog.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Collaborative Filtering for Implicit Feedback Datasets

TL;DR: This work identifies unique properties of implicit feedback datasets and proposes treating the data as indication of positive and negative preference associated with vastly varying confidence levels, which leads to a factor model which is especially tailored for implicit feedback recommenders.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Collaborative topic modeling for recommending scientific articles

TL;DR: An algorithm to recommend scientific articles to users of an online community that combines the merits of traditional collaborative filtering and probabilistic topic modeling and can form recommendations about both existing and newly published articles is developed.
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