Abstract

Sequential recommender systems (SRS) have become the key technology in capturing user's dynamic interests and generating high-quality recommendations. Current state-of-the-art sequential recommender models are typically based on a sandwich-structured deep neural network, where one or more middle (hidden) layers are placed between the input embedding layer and output softmax layer. In general, these models require a large number of parameters (such as using a large embedding dimension or a deep network architecture) to obtain their optimal performance. Despite the effectiveness, at some point, further increasing model size may be harder for model deployment in resource-constraint devices, resulting in longer responding time and larger memory footprint. To resolve the issues, we propose a compressed sequential recommendation framework, termed as CpRec, where two generic model shrinking techniques are employed. Specifically, we first propose a block-wise adaptive decomposition to approximate the input and softmax matrices by exploiting the fact that items in SRS obey a long-tailed distribution. To reduce the parameters of the middle layers, we introduce three layer-wise parameter sharing schemes. We instantiate CpRec using deep convolutional neural network with dilated kernels given consideration to both recommendation accuracy and efficiency. By the extensive ablation studies, we demonstrate that the proposed CpRec can achieve up to 4$\sim$8 times compression rates in real-world SRS datasets. Meanwhile, CpRec is faster during training\inference, and in most cases outperforms its uncompressed counterpart.

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