Abstract

Collaborative filtering (CF) usually suffers from data sparsity and cold starts. Knowledge graphs (KGs) are widely used to improve recommendation performance. To verify that knowledge graphs can further alleviate the above problems, this paper proposes an end-to-end framework that uses attentive knowledge graph perceptual propagation for recommendations (AKGP). This framework uses a knowledge graph as a source of auxiliary information to extract user–item interaction information and build a sub-knowledge base. The fusion of structural and contextual information is used to construct fine-grained knowledge graphs via knowledge graph embedding methods and to generate initial embedding representations. Through multi-layer propagation, the structured information and historical preference information are embedded into a unified vector space, and the potential user–item vector representation is expanded. This article used a knowledge perception attention module to achieve feature representation, and finally, the model was optimized using the stratified sampling joint learning method. Compared with the baseline model using MovieLens-1M, Last-FM, Book-Crossing and other data sets, the experimental results demonstrate that the model outperforms state-of-the-art KG-based recommendation methods, and the shortcomings of the existing model are improved. The model was applied to product design data and historical maintenance records provided by an automotive parts manufacturing company. The predictions of the recommended system are matched to the product requirements and possible failure records. This helped reduce costs and increase productivity, helping the company to quickly determine the cause of failures and reduce unplanned downtime.

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