Abstract

Mainstream solutions to sequential recommendation represent items with fixed vectors. These vectors have limited capability in capturing items’ latent aspects and users’ diverse preferences. As a new generative paradigm, diffusion models have achieved excellent performance in areas like computer vision and natural language processing. To our understanding, its unique merit in representation generation well fits the problem setting of sequential recommendation. In this article, we make the very first attempt to adapt the diffusion model to sequential recommendation and propose DiffuRec for item representation construction and uncertainty injection. Rather than modeling item representations as fixed vectors, we represent them as distributions in DiffuRec , which reflect a user’s multiple interests and an item’s various aspects adaptively. In the diffusion phase, DiffuRec corrupts the target item embedding into a Gaussian distribution via noise adding, which is further applied for sequential item distribution representation generation and uncertainty injection. Afterward, the item representation is fed into an approximator for target item representation reconstruction. In the reverse phase, based on a user’s historical interaction behaviors, we reverse a Gaussian noise into the target item representation, then apply a rounding operation for target item prediction. Experiments over four datasets show that DiffuRec outperforms strong baselines by a large margin. 1

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