TY - GEN
T1 - Towards Boosting LLMs-driven Relevance Modeling with Progressive Retrieved Behavior-augmented Prompting
AU - Chen, Zeyuan
AU - Wu, Haiyan
AU - Wu, Kaixin
AU - Chen, Wei
AU - Zhong, Mingjie
AU - Xu, Jia
AU - Liu, Zhongyi
AU - Zhang, Wei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2025 Association for Computational Linguistics.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Relevance modeling is a critical component for enhancing user experience in search engines, with the primary objective of identifying items that align with users’ queries. Traditional models only rely on the semantic congruence between queries and items to ascertain relevance. However, this approach represents merely one aspect of the relevance judgement, and is insufficient in isolation. Even powerful Large Language Models (LLMs) still cannot accurately judge the relevance of a query and an item from a semantic perspective. To augment LLMs-driven relevance modeling, this study proposes leveraging user interactions recorded in search logs to yield insights into users’ implicit search intentions. The challenge lies in the effective prompting of LLMs to capture dynamic search intentions, which poses several obstacles in real-world relevance scenarios, i.e., the absence of domain-specific knowledge, the inadequacy of an isolated prompt, and the prohibitive costs associated with deploying LLMs. In response, we propose ProRBP, a novel Progressive Retrieved Behavior-augmented Prompting framework for integrating search scenario-oriented knowledge with LLMs effectively. Specifically, we perform the user-driven behavior neighbors retrieval from the daily search logs to obtain domain-specific knowledge in time, retrieving candidates that users consider to meet their expectations. Then, we guide LLMs for relevance modeling by employing advanced prompting techniques that progressively improve the outputs of the LLMs, followed by a progressive aggregation with comprehensive consideration of diverse aspects. For online serving, we have developed an industrial application framework tailored for the deployment of LLMs in relevance modeling. Experiments on real-world industry data and online A/B testing demonstrate our proposal achieves promising performance.
AB - Relevance modeling is a critical component for enhancing user experience in search engines, with the primary objective of identifying items that align with users’ queries. Traditional models only rely on the semantic congruence between queries and items to ascertain relevance. However, this approach represents merely one aspect of the relevance judgement, and is insufficient in isolation. Even powerful Large Language Models (LLMs) still cannot accurately judge the relevance of a query and an item from a semantic perspective. To augment LLMs-driven relevance modeling, this study proposes leveraging user interactions recorded in search logs to yield insights into users’ implicit search intentions. The challenge lies in the effective prompting of LLMs to capture dynamic search intentions, which poses several obstacles in real-world relevance scenarios, i.e., the absence of domain-specific knowledge, the inadequacy of an isolated prompt, and the prohibitive costs associated with deploying LLMs. In response, we propose ProRBP, a novel Progressive Retrieved Behavior-augmented Prompting framework for integrating search scenario-oriented knowledge with LLMs effectively. Specifically, we perform the user-driven behavior neighbors retrieval from the daily search logs to obtain domain-specific knowledge in time, retrieving candidates that users consider to meet their expectations. Then, we guide LLMs for relevance modeling by employing advanced prompting techniques that progressively improve the outputs of the LLMs, followed by a progressive aggregation with comprehensive consideration of diverse aspects. For online serving, we have developed an industrial application framework tailored for the deployment of LLMs in relevance modeling. Experiments on real-world industry data and online A/B testing demonstrate our proposal achieves promising performance.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105000191469
M3 - 会议稿件
AN - SCOPUS:105000191469
T3 - Proceedings - International Conference on Computational Linguistics, COLING
SP - 784
EP - 793
BT - Industry Track
A2 - Rambow, Owen
A2 - Wanner, Leo
A2 - Apidianaki, Marianna
A2 - Al-Khalifa, Hend
A2 - Di Eugenio, Barbara
A2 - Schockaert, Steven
A2 - Darwish, Kareem
A2 - Agarwal, Apoorv
PB - Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL)
T2 - 31st International Conference on Computational Linguistics, COLING 2025
Y2 - 19 January 2025 through 24 January 2025
ER -