State-of-the-art music recommender systems are based on collaborative filtering, which builds upon learning similarities between users and songs from the available listening data. These approaches inherently face the cold-start problem, as they cannot recommend novel songs with no listening history. Content-aware recommendation addresses this issue by incorporating content information about the songs on top of collaborative filtering. However, methods falling in this category rely on a shallow user/item interaction that originates from a matrix factorization framework. In this work, we introduce neural content-aware collaborative filtering, a unified framework which alleviates these limits, and extends the recently introduced neural collaborative filtering to its content-aware counterpart. We propose a generative model which leverages deep learning for both extracting content information from low-level acoustic features and for modeling the interaction between users and songs embeddings. The deep content feature extractor can either directly predict the item embedding, or serve as a regularization prior, yielding two variants (strict and relaxed) of our model. Experimental results show that the proposed method reaches state-of-the-art results for a cold-start music recommendation task. We notably observe that exploiting deep neural networks for learning refined user/item interactions outperforms approaches using a more simple interaction model in a content-aware framework.
Saliency prediction has made great strides over the past two decades, with current techniques modeling low-level information, such as color, intensity and size contrasts, and high-level one, such as attention and gaze direction for entire objects. Despite this, these methods fail to account for the dissimilarity between objects, which humans naturally do. In this paper, we introduce a detection-guided saliency prediction network that explicitly models the differences between multiple objects, such as their appearance and size dissimilarities. Our approach is general, allowing us to fuse our object dissimilarities with features extracted by any deep saliency prediction network. As evidenced by our experiments, this consistently boosts the accuracy of the baseline networks, enabling us to outperform the state-of-the-art models on three saliency benchmarks, namely SALICON, MIT300 and CAT2000.
Pulmonary lobe segmentation is an important preprocessing task for the analysis of lung diseases. Traditional methods relying on fissure detection or other anatomical features, such as the distribution of pulmonary vessels and airways, could provide reasonably accurate lobe segmentations. Deep learning based methods can outperform these traditional approaches, but require large datasets. Deep multi-task learning is expected to utilize labels of multiple different structures. However, commonly such labels are distributed over multiple datasets. In this paper, we proposed a multi-task semi-supervised model that can leverage information of multiple structures from unannotated datasets and datasets annotated with different structures. A focused alternating training strategy is presented to balance the different tasks. We evaluated the trained model on an external independent CT dataset. The results show that our model significantly outperforms single-task alternatives, improving the mean surface distance from 7.174 mm to 4.196 mm. We also demonstrated that our approach is successful for different network architectures as backbones.
What is the relationship between linguistic dependencies and statistical dependence? Building on earlier work in NLP and cognitive science, we study this question. We introduce a contextualized version of pointwise mutual information (CPMI), using pretrained language models to estimate probabilities of words in context. Extracting dependency trees which maximize CPMI, we compare the resulting structures against gold dependencies. Overall, we find that these maximum-CPMI trees correspond to linguistic dependencies more often than trees extracted from non-contextual PMI estimate, but only roughly as often as a simple baseline formed by connecting adjacent words. We also provide evidence that the extent to which the two kinds of dependency align cannot be explained by the distance between words or by the category of the dependency relation. Finally, our analysis sheds some light on the differences between large pretrained language models, specifically in the kinds of inductive biases they encode.
Self-organization is a process where a stable pattern is formed by the cooperative behavior between parts of an initially disordered system without external control or influence. It has been introduced to multi-agent systems as an internal control process or mechanism to solve difficult problems spontaneously. However, because a self-organizing multi-agent system has autonomous agents and local interactions between them, it is difficult to predict the behavior of the system from the behavior of the local agents we design. This paper proposes a logic-based framework of self-organizing multi-agent systems, where agents interact with each other by following their prescribed local rules. The dependence relation between coalitions of agents regarding their contributions to the global behavior of the system is reasoned about from the structural and semantic perspectives. We show that the computational complexity of verifying such a self-organizing multi-agent system remains close to the domain of standard ATL. We then combine our framework with graph theory to decompose a system into different coalitions located in different layers, which allows us to verify agents' full contributions more efficiently. The resulting information about agents' full contributions allows us to understand the complex link between local agent behavior and system level behavior in a self-organizing multi-agent system. Finally, we show how we can use our framework to model a constraint satisfaction problem.
In a conventional domain adaptation person Re-identification (Re-ID) task, both the training and test images in target domain are collected under the sunny weather. However, in reality, the pedestrians to be retrieved may be obtained under severe weather conditions such as hazy, dusty and snowing, etc. This paper proposes a novel Interference Suppression Model (ISM) to deal with the interference caused by the hazy weather in domain adaptation person Re-ID. A teacherstudent model is used in the ISM to distill the interference information at the feature level by reducing the discrepancy between the clear and the hazy intrinsic similarity matrix. Furthermore, in the distribution level, the extra discriminator is introduced to assist the student model make the interference feature distribution more clear. The experimental results show that the proposed method achieves the superior performance on two synthetic datasets than the stateof-the-art methods. The related code will be released online https://github.com/pangjian123/ISM-ReID.
Extreme multi-label classification (XMC) aims to learn a model that can tag data points with a subset of relevant labels from an extremely large label set. Real world e-commerce applications like personalized recommendations and product advertising can be formulated as XMC problems, where the objective is to predict for a user a small subset of items from a catalog of several million products. For such applications, a common approach is to organize these labels into a tree, enabling training and inference times that are logarithmic in the number of labels. While training a model once a label tree is available is well studied, designing the structure of the tree is a difficult task that is not yet well understood, and can dramatically impact both model latency and statistical performance. Existing approaches to tree construction fall at an extreme point, either optimizing exclusively for statistical performance, or for latency. We propose an efficient information theory inspired algorithm to construct intermediary operating points that trade off between the benefits of both. Our algorithm enables interpolation between these objectives, which was not previously possible. We corroborate our theoretical analysis with numerical results, showing that on the Wiki-500K benchmark dataset our method can reduce a proxy for expected latency by up to 28% while maintaining the same accuracy as Parabel. On several datasets derived from e-commerce customer logs, our modified label tree is able to improve this expected latency metric by up to 20% while maintaining the same accuracy. Finally, we discuss challenges in realizing these latency improvements in deployed models.
Understanding privacy policies is crucial for users as it empowers them to learn about the information that matters to them. Sentences written in a privacy policy document explain privacy practices, and the constituent text spans convey further specific information about that practice. We refer to predicting the privacy practice explained in a sentence as intent classification and identifying the text spans sharing specific information as slot filling. In this work, we propose PolicyIE, a corpus consisting of 5,250 intent and 11,788 slot annotations spanning 31 privacy policies of websites and mobile applications. PolicyIE corpus is a challenging benchmark with limited labeled examples reflecting the cost of collecting large-scale annotations. We present two alternative neural approaches as baselines: (1) formulating intent classification and slot filling as a joint sequence tagging and (2) modeling them as a sequence-to-sequence (Seq2Seq) learning task. Experiment results show that both approaches perform comparably in intent classification, while the Seq2Seq method outperforms the sequence tagging approach in slot filling by a large margin. Error analysis reveals the deficiency of the baseline approaches, suggesting room for improvement in future works. We hope the PolicyIE corpus will stimulate future research in this domain.
Keyphrase Generation (KG) is the task of generating central topics from a given document or literary work, which captures the crucial information necessary to understand the content. Documents such as scientific literature contain rich meta-sentence information, which represents the logical-semantic structure of the documents. However, previous approaches ignore the constraints of document logical structure, and hence they mistakenly generate keyphrases from unimportant sentences. To address this problem, we propose a new method called Sentence Selective Network (SenSeNet) to incorporate the meta-sentence inductive bias into KG. In SenSeNet, we use a straight-through estimator for end-to-end training and incorporate weak supervision in the training of the sentence selection module. Experimental results show that SenSeNet can consistently improve the performance of major KG models based on seq2seq framework, which demonstrate the effectiveness of capturing structural information and distinguishing the significance of sentences in KG task.
Over the past decades, enormous efforts have been made to improve the performance of linear or nonlinear mixing models for hyperspectral unmixing, yet their ability to simultaneously generalize various spectral variabilities and extract physically meaningful endmembers still remains limited due to the poor ability in data fitting and reconstruction and the sensitivity to various spectral variabilities. Inspired by the powerful learning ability of deep learning, we attempt to develop a general deep learning approach for hyperspectral unmixing, by fully considering the properties of endmembers extracted from the hyperspectral imagery, called endmember-guided unmixing network (EGU-Net). Beyond the alone autoencoder-like architecture, EGU-Net is a two-stream Siamese deep network, which learns an additional network from the pure or nearly-pure endmembers to correct the weights of another unmixing network by sharing network parameters and adding spectrally meaningful constraints (e.g., non-negativity and sum-to-one) towards a more accurate and interpretable unmixing solution. Furthermore, the resulting general framework is not only limited to pixel-wise spectral unmixing but also applicable to spatial information modeling with convolutional operators for spatial-spectral unmixing. Experimental results conducted on three different datasets with the ground-truth of abundance maps corresponding to each material demonstrate the effectiveness and superiority of the EGU-Net over state-of-the-art unmixing algorithms. The codes will be available from the website: https://github.com/danfenghong/IEEE_TNNLS_EGU-Net.