Large Multi-modal Encoders for Recommendation

31 Oct 2023  ·  Zixuan Yi, Zijun Long, Iadh Ounis, Craig Macdonald, Richard McCreadie ·

In recent years, the rapid growth of online multimedia services, such as e-commerce platforms, has necessitated the development of personalised recommendation approaches that can encode diverse content about each item. Indeed, modern multi-modal recommender systems exploit diverse features obtained from raw images and item descriptions to enhance the recommendation performance. However, the existing multi-modal recommenders primarily depend on the features extracted individually from different media through pre-trained modality-specific encoders, and exhibit only shallow alignments between different modalities - limiting these systems' ability to capture the underlying relationships between the modalities. In this paper, we investigate the usage of large multi-modal encoders within the specific context of recommender systems, as these have previously demonstrated state-of-the-art effectiveness when ranking items across various domains. Specifically, we tailor two state-of-the-art multi-modal encoders (CLIP and VLMo) for recommendation tasks using a range of strategies, including the exploration of pre-trained and fine-tuned encoders, as well as the assessment of the end-to-end training of these encoders. We demonstrate that pre-trained large multi-modal encoders can generate more aligned and effective user/item representations compared to existing modality-specific encoders across three multi-modal recommendation datasets. Furthermore, we show that fine-tuning these large multi-modal encoders with recommendation datasets leads to an enhanced recommendation performance. In terms of different training paradigms, our experiments highlight the essential role of the end-to-end training of large multi-modal encoders in multi-modal recommendation systems.

PDF Abstract
No code implementations yet. Submit your code now

Datasets


  Add Datasets introduced or used in this paper

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods


No methods listed for this paper. Add relevant methods here