Build status | |
---|---|
Linux | |
OSX (OpenMP disabled) | |
Windows (OpenMP disabled) |
LightFM is a Python implementation of a number of popular recommendation algorithms for both implicit and explicit feedback, including efficient implementation of BPR and WARP ranking losses. It's easy to use, fast (via multithreaded model estimation), and produces high quality results.
It also makes it possible to incorporate both item and user metadata into the traditional matrix factorization algorithms. It represents each user and item as the sum of the latent representations of their features, thus allowing recommendations to generalise to new items (via item features) and to new users (via user features).
For more details, see the Documentation.
Need help? Contact me via email, Twitter, or Gitter.
Fitting an implicit feedback model on the MovieLens 100k dataset is very easy:
from lightfm import LightFM
from lightfm.datasets import fetch_movielens
from lightfm.evaluation import precision_at_k
# Load the MovieLens 100k dataset. Only five
# star ratings are treated as positive.
data = fetch_movielens(min_rating=5.0)
# Instantiate and train the model
model = LightFM(loss='warp')
model.fit(data['train'], epochs=30, num_threads=2)
# Evaluate the trained model
test_precision = precision_at_k(model, data['test'], k=5).mean()
- Learning to Rank Sketchfab Models with LightFM
- Metadata Embeddings for User and Item Cold-start Recommendations
- Recommendation Systems - Learn Python for Data Science
- Using LightFM to Recommend Projects to Consultants
Please cite LightFM if it helps your research. You can use the following BibTeX entry:
@inproceedings{DBLP:conf/recsys/Kula15,
author = {Maciej Kula},
editor = {Toine Bogers and
Marijn Koolen},
title = {Metadata Embeddings for User and Item Cold-start Recommendations},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2nd Workshop on New Trends on Content-Based Recommender
Systems co-located with 9th {ACM} Conference on Recommender Systems
(RecSys 2015), Vienna, Austria, September 16-20, 2015.},
series = {{CEUR} Workshop Proceedings},
volume = {1448},
pages = {14--21},
publisher = {CEUR-WS.org},
year = {2015},
url = {http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1448/paper4.pdf},
}
Pull requests are welcome. To install for development:
- Clone the repository:
git clone git@github.com:lyst/lightfm.git
- Install it for development using pip:
cd lightfm && pip install -e .
- You can run tests by running
python setup.py test
.
When making changes to the .pyx
extension files, you'll need to run python setup.py cythonize
in order to produce the extension .c
files before running pip install -e .
.