<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:dcq="http://purl.org/dc/terms/"><records count="1" morepages="false" start="1" end="1"><record rownumber="1"><dc:product_type>Conference Paper</dc:product_type><dc:title>Real-Time Streaming Graph Embedding Through Local Actions</dc:title><dc:creator>Liu, Xi; Hsieh, Ping-Chun; Duffield, Nick; Chen, Rui; Xie, Muhe; Wen, Xidao</dc:creator><dc:corporate_author/><dc:editor/><dc:description>Recently, considerable research attention has been paid to graph embedding, a popular approach to construct representations of vertices in latent space. Due to the curse of dimensionality and sparsity in graphical datasets, this approach has become indispensable for machine learning tasks over large networks. The majority of the existing literature has considered this technique under the assumption that the network is static. However, networks in many applications, including social networks, collaboration networks, and recommender systems, nodes, and edges accrue to a growing network as streaming. A small number of very recent results have addressed the problem of embedding for dynamic networks. However, they either rely on knowledge of vertex attributes, su er high-time complexity or need to be re-trained without closed-form expression. Thus the approach of adapting the existing methods designed for static networks or dynamic networks to the streaming environment faces non-trivial technical challenges.
These challenges motivate developing new approaches to the problems of streaming graph embedding. In this paper, we propose a new framework that is able to generate latent representations for new vertices with high e ciency and low complexity under speci ed iteration rounds. We formulate a constrained optimiza- tion problem for the modi cation of the representation resulting from a stream arrival. We show this problem has no closed-form solution and instead develop an online approximation solution. Our solution follows three steps: (1) identify vertices a ected by newly arrived ones, (2) generating latent features for new vertices, and (3) updating the latent features of the most a ected vertices. The new representations are guaranteed to be feasible in the original constrained optimization problem. Meanwhile, the solution only brings about a small change to existing representations and only slightly changes the value of the objective function. Multi-class clas- si cation and clustering on  ve real-world networks demonstrate that our model can e ciently update vertex representations and simultaneously achieve comparable or even better performance compared with model retraining.</dc:description><dc:publisher/><dc:date>2019-05-01</dc:date><dc:nsf_par_id>10109798</dc:nsf_par_id><dc:journal_name>Companion Proceedings of the 2019 World Wide Web Conference (WWW ’19 Companion)</dc:journal_name><dc:journal_volume/><dc:journal_issue/><dc:page_range_or_elocation>285 to 293</dc:page_range_or_elocation><dc:issn/><dc:isbn/><dc:doi>https://doi.org/10.1145/3308560.3316585</dc:doi><dcq:identifierAwardId>1848596</dcq:identifierAwardId><dc:subject/><dc:version_number/><dc:location/><dc:rights/><dc:institution/><dc:sponsoring_org>National Science Foundation</dc:sponsoring_org></record></records></rdf:RDF>