skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: HGDL: Heterogeneous Graph Label Distribution Learning
Label Distribution Learning (LDL) has been extensively studied in IID data applications such as computer vision, thanks to its more generic setting over single-label and multi-label classification. This paper advances LDL into graph domains and aims to tackle a novel and fundamental heterogeneous graph label distribution learning (HGDL) problem. We argue that the graph heterogeneity reflected on node types, node attributes, and neighborhood structures can impose significant challenges for generalizing LDL onto graphs. To address the challenges, we propose a new learning framework with two key components: 1) proactive graph topology homogenization, and 2) topology and content consistency-aware graph transformer. Specifically, the former learns optimal information aggregation between meta-paths, so that the node heterogeneity can be proactively addressed prior to the succeeding embedding learning; the latter leverages an attention mechanism to learn consistency between meta-path and node attributes, allowing network topology and nodal attributes to be equally emphasized during the label distribution learning. By using KL-divergence and additional constraints, HGDL delivers an end-to-end solution for learning and predicting label distribution for nodes. Both theoretical and empirical studies substantiate the effectiveness of our HGDL approach.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2446522 2441449 2236578
PAR ID:
10595842
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ;
Publisher / Repository:
The 38th Annual Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS 2024)
Date Published:
ISSN:
9798331314385
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Label Distribution Learning (LDL), as a more general learning setting than generic single-label and multi-label learning, has been commonly used in computer vision and many other applications. To date, existing LDL approaches are designed and applied to data without considering the interdependence between instances. In this paper, we propose a Graph Label Distribution Learning (GLDL) framework, which explicitly models three types of relationships: instance-instance, label-label, and instance-label, to learn the label distribution for networked data. A label-label network is learned to capture label-to-label correlation, through which GLDL can accurately learn label distributions for nodes. Dual graph convolution network (GCN) Co-training with heterogeneous message passing ensures two GCNs, one focusing on instance-instance relationship and the other one targeting label-label correlation, are jointly trained such that instance-instance relationship can help induce label-label correlation and vice versa. Our theoretical study derives the error bound of GLDL. For verification, four benchmark datasets with label distributions for nodes are created using common graph benchmarks. The experiments show that considering dependency helps learn better label distributions for networked data, compared to state-of-the-art LDL baseline. In addition, GLDL not only outperforms simple GCN and graph attention networks (GAT) using distribution loss but is also superior to its variant considering label-label relationship as a static network. GLDL and its benchmarks are the first research endeavors to address LDL for graphs. Code and benchmark data are released for public access. 
    more » « less
  2. Label Propagation Algorithm (LPA) and Graph Convolutional Neural Networks (GCN) are both message passing algorithms on graphs. Both solve the task of node classification, but LPA propagates node label information across the edges of the graph, while GCN propagates and transforms node feature information. However, while conceptually similar, theoretical relationship between LPA and GCN has not yet been systematically investigated. Moreover, it is unclear how LPA and GCN can be combined under a unified framework to improve the performance. Here we study the relationship between LPA and GCN in terms of feature/label influence , in which we characterize how much the initial feature/label of one node influences the final feature/label of another node in GCN/LPA. Based on our theoretical analysis, we propose an end-to-end model that combines GCN and LPA. In our unified model, edge weights are learnable, and the LPA serves as regularization to assist the GCN in learning proper edge weights that lead to improved performance. Our model can also be seen as learning the weights of edges based on node labels, which is more direct and efficient than existing feature-based attention models or topology-based diffusion models. In a number of experiments for semi-supervised node classification and knowledge-graph-aware recommendation, our model shows superiority over state-of-the-art baselines. 
    more » « less
  3. For real-world graph data, the node class distribution is inherently imbalanced and long-tailed, which naturally leads to a few-shot learning scenario with limited nodes labeled for newly emerging classes. Existing efforts are carefully designed to solve such a few-shot learning problem via data augmentation, learning transferable initialization, to name a few. However, most, if not all, of them are based on a strong assumption that all the test nodes must exclusively come from novel classes, which is impractical in real-world applications. In this paper, we study a broader and more realistic problem named generalized few-shot node classification, where the test samples can be from both novel classes and base classes. Compared with the standard fewshot node classification, this new problem imposes several unique challenges, including asymmetric classification and inconsistent preference. To counter those challenges, we propose a shot-aware graph neural network (STAGER) equipped with an uncertainty-based weight assigner module for adaptive propagation. To formulate this problem from the meta-learning perspective, we propose a new training paradigm named imbalanced episodic training to ensure the label distribution is consistent between the training and test scenarios. Experiment results on four real-world datasets demonstrate the efficacy of our model, with up to 14% accuracy improvement over baselines. 
    more » « less
  4. This paper presents HGEN that pioneers ensemble learning for heterogeneous graphs. We argue that the heterogeneity in node types, nodal features, and local neighborhood topology poses significant challenges for ensemble learning, particularly in accommodating diverse graph learners. Our HGEN framework ensembles multiple learners through a meta-path and transformation-based optimization pipeline to uplift classification accuracy. Specifically, HGEN uses meta-path combined with random dropping to create Allele Graph Neural Networks (GNNs), whereby the base graph learners are trained and aligned for later ensembling. To ensure effective ensemble learning, HGEN presents two key components:1) a residual-attention mechanism to calibrate allele GNNs of different meta-paths, thereby enforcing node embeddings to focus on more informative graphs to improve base learner accuracy, and 2) a correlation-regularization term to enlarge the disparity among embedding matrices generated from different meta-paths, thereby enriching base learner diversity. We analyze the convergence of HGEN and attest its higher regularization magnitude over simple voting. Experiments on five heterogeneous networks validate that HGEN consistently outperforms its state-of-the-art competitors by substantial margin. Codes are available at https://github.com/Chrisshen12/HGEN. 
    more » « less
  5. null (Ed.)
    In this paper, we propose a supervised graph representation learning method to model the relationship between brain functional connectivity (FC) and structural connectivity (SC) through a graph encoder-decoder system. The graph convolutional network (GCN) model is leveraged in the encoder to learn lower-dimensional node representations (i.e. node embeddings) integrating information from both node attributes and network topology. In doing so, the encoder manages to capture both direct and indirect interactions between brain regions in the node embeddings which later help reconstruct empirical FC networks. From node embeddings, graph representations are learnt to embed the entire graphs into a vector space. Our end-to-end model utilizes a multi-objective loss function to simultaneously learn node representations for FC network reconstruction and graph representations for subject classification. The experiment on a large population of non-drinkers and heavy drinkers shows that our model can provide a characterization of the population pattern in the SC-FC relationship, while also learning features that capture individual uniqueness for subject classification. The identified key brain subnetworks show significant between-group difference and support the promising prospect of GCN-based graph representation learning on brain networks to model human brain activity and function. 
    more » « less