Abstract

In modern online life, recommender systems can help us filter unimportant information. Researchers of recommendation algorithms usually utilize historical interaction data to mine potential user preferences. However, most existing methods use rating data to mine user interest preferences, ignoring rich textual information such as reviews. Although some researchers have attempted to combine ratings and reviews for recommendation, we believe the following shortcomings still exist. First, existing methods are overly dependent on the accuracy of external sentiment analysis tools. Second, existing methods do not fully utilize the features extracted from reviews. Further, existing methods focus only on the aspects that users like, while ignoring the aspects that users dislike, and they cannot completely model users’ true preferences. To address the above issues, in this paper, we propose a recommendation model based on the aspect of the sentiment knowledge graph attention network (ASKAT). We first use the improved aspect-based sentiment analysis algorithm to extract aspectual sentiment features from reviews. Then, to overcome the difficulty in underutilizing the information extracted from the comments, we build aspects of sentiment-enhanced collaborative knowledge mapping. After that, we propose a new graph attention network that uses sentiment-aware attention mechanisms to aggregate neighbour information. Finally, our experimental results on three datasets, Movie, Amazon book, and Yelp, show that our model consistently outperforms the baseline model in two recommendation scenarios, click-through-rate prediction and Top-k recommendation. Compared with other models, the method shows significant improvement in both recommendation accuracy and personalised recommendation effectiveness.

Full Text
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