Abstract

Neural graph based Collaborative Filtering (CF) models learn user and item embeddings based on the user-item bipartite graph structure, and have achieved state-of-the-art recommendation performance. In the ubiquitous implicit feedback based CF, users' unobserved behaviors are treated as unlinked edges in the user-item bipartite graph. As users' unobserved behaviors are mixed with dislikes and unknown positive preferences, the fixed graph structure input is missing with potential positive preference links. In this paper, we study how to better learn enhanced graph structure for CF. We argue that node embedding learning and graph structure learning can mutually enhance each other in CF, as updated node embeddings are learned from previous graph structure, and vice versa ~(i.e., newly updated graph structure are optimized based on current node embedding results). Some previous works provided approaches to refine the graph structure. However, most of these graph learning models relied on node features for modeling, which are not available in CF. Besides, nearly all optimization goals tried to compare the learned adaptive graph and the original graph from a local reconstruction perspective, whether the global properties of the adaptive graph structure are modeled in the learning process is still unknown. To this end, in this paper, we propose an enhanced graph learning network EGLN approach for CF via mutual information maximization. The key idea of EGLN is two folds: First, we let the enhanced graph learning module and the node embedding module iteratively learn from each other without any feature input. Second, we design a local-global consistency optimization function to capture the global properties in the enhanced graph learning process. Finally, extensive experimental results on three real-world datasets clearly show the effectiveness of our proposed model.

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