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Most Influential ACM MULTIMEDIA 2023 Paper · 2026-03 edition

A Tale of Two Graphs: Freezing and Denoising Graph Structures for Multimodal Recommendation

Xin Zhou; Zhiqi Shen

Venue
ACM International Conference on Multimedia (ACM MULTIMEDIA) 2023
Recognition
Most Influential ACM MULTIMEDIA 2023 Paper (Rank No. 1)
Edition
2026-03
Impact factor
5
Certificate ID
7e7e87cebf3d3b70

Abstract

Multimodal recommender systems utilizing multimodal features (e.g., images and textual descriptions) typically show better recommendation accuracy than general recommendation models based solely on user-item interactions. Generally, prior work fuses multimodal features into item ID embeddings to enrich item representations, thus failing to capture the latent semantic item-item structures. In this context, LATTICE proposes to learn the latent structure between items explicitly and achieves state-of-the-art performance for multimodal recommendations. However, we argue the latent graph structure learning of LATTICE is both inefficient and unnecessary. Experimentally, we demonstrate that freezing its item-item structure before training can also achieve competitive performance. Based on this finding, we propose a simple yet effective model, dubbed as FREEDOM, that FREEzes the item-item graph and DenOises the user-item interaction graph simultaneously for Multimodal recommendation. Theoretically, we examine the design of FREEDOM through a graph spectral perspective and demonstrate that it possesses a tighter upper bound on the graph spectrum. In denoising the user-item interaction graph, we devise a degree-sensitive edge pruning method, which rejects possibly noisy edges with a high probability when sampling the graph. We evaluate the proposed model on three real-world datasets and show that FREEDOM can significantly outperform the strongest baselines. Compared with LATTICE, FREEDOM achieves an average improvement of 19.07\% in recommendation accuracy while reducing its memory cost up to 6x on large graphs. The source code is available at: https://github.com/enoche/FREEDOM.

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