23/08/2020

Towards automated neural interaction discovery for click-through rate prediction

Qingquan Song, Dehua Cheng, Hanning Zhou, Jiyan Yang, Yuandong Tian, Xia Hu

Keywords: neural architecture search, evolutionary algorithm, CTR prediction

Abstract: Click-Through Rate (CTR) prediction is one of the most important machine learning tasks in recommender systems, driving personalized experience for billions of consumers. Neural architecture search (NAS), as an emerging field, has demonstrated its capabilities in discovering powerful neural network architectures, which motivates us to explore its potential for CTR predictions. Due to 1) diverse unstructured feature interactions, 2) heterogeneous feature space, and 3) high data volume and intrinsic data randomness, it is challenging to construct, search, and compare different architectures effectively for recommendation models. To address these challenges, we propose an automated interaction architecture discovering framework for CTR prediction named AutoCTR. Via modularizing simple yet representative interactions as virtual building blocks and wiring them into a space of direct acyclic graphs, AutoCTR performs evolutionary architecture exploration with learning-to-rank guidance at the architecture level and achieves acceleration using low-fidelity model. Empirical analysis demonstrates the effectiveness of AutoCTR on different datasets comparing to human-crafted architectures. The discovered architecture also enjoys generalizability and transferability among different datasets.

The video of this talk cannot be embedded. You can watch it here:
https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3394486.3403137#sec-supp
(Link will open in new window)
 0
 0
 0
 0
This is an embedded video. Talk and the respective paper are published at KDD 2020 virtual conference. If you are one of the authors of the paper and want to manage your upload, see the question "My papertalk has been externally embedded..." in the FAQ section.

Comments

Post Comment
no comments yet
code of conduct: tbd Characters remaining: 140

Similar Papers