Yuji Yang

CV
3papers
61citations
Novelty50%
AI Score27

3 Papers

LGMay 24, 2022
Ensemble Multi-Relational Graph Neural Networks

Yuling Wang, Hao Xu, Yanhua Yu et al.

It is well established that graph neural networks (GNNs) can be interpreted and designed from the perspective of optimization objective. With this clear optimization objective, the deduced GNNs architecture has sound theoretical foundation, which is able to flexibly remedy the weakness of GNNs. However, this optimization objective is only proved for GNNs with single-relational graph. Can we infer a new type of GNNs for multi-relational graphs by extending this optimization objective, so as to simultaneously solve the issues in previous multi-relational GNNs, e.g., over-parameterization? In this paper, we propose a novel ensemble multi-relational GNNs by designing an ensemble multi-relational (EMR) optimization objective. This EMR optimization objective is able to derive an iterative updating rule, which can be formalized as an ensemble message passing (EnMP) layer with multi-relations. We further analyze the nice properties of EnMP layer, e.g., the relationship with multi-relational personalized PageRank. Finally, a new multi-relational GNNs which well alleviate the over-smoothing and over-parameterization issues are proposed. Extensive experiments conducted on four benchmark datasets well demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed model.

IRAug 1, 2022
Long Short-Term Preference Modeling for Continuous-Time Sequential Recommendation

Huixuan Chi, Hao Xu, Hao Fu et al.

Modeling the evolution of user preference is essential in recommender systems. Recently, dynamic graph-based methods have been studied and achieved SOTA for recommendation, majority of which focus on user's stable long-term preference. However, in real-world scenario, user's short-term preference evolves over time dynamically. Although there exists sequential methods that attempt to capture it, how to model the evolution of short-term preference with dynamic graph-based methods has not been well-addressed yet. In particular: 1) existing methods do not explicitly encode and capture the evolution of short-term preference as sequential methods do; 2) simply using last few interactions is not enough for modeling the changing trend. In this paper, we propose Long Short-Term Preference Modeling for Continuous-Time Sequential Recommendation (LSTSR) to capture the evolution of short-term preference under dynamic graph. Specifically, we explicitly encode short-term preference and optimize it via memory mechanism, which has three key operations: Message, Aggregate and Update. Our memory mechanism can not only store one-hop information, but also trigger with new interactions online. Extensive experiments conducted on five public datasets show that LSTSR consistently outperforms many state-of-the-art recommendation methods across various lines.

CVJun 21, 2024
GIC: Gaussian-Informed Continuum for Physical Property Identification and Simulation

Junhao Cai, Yuji Yang, Weihao Yuan et al.

This paper studies the problem of estimating physical properties (system identification) through visual observations. To facilitate geometry-aware guidance in physical property estimation, we introduce a novel hybrid framework that leverages 3D Gaussian representation to not only capture explicit shapes but also enable the simulated continuum to render object masks as 2D shape surrogates during training. We propose a new dynamic 3D Gaussian framework based on motion factorization to recover the object as 3D Gaussian point sets across different time states. Furthermore, we develop a coarse-to-fine filling strategy to generate the density fields of the object from the Gaussian reconstruction, allowing for the extraction of object continuums along with their surfaces and the integration of Gaussian attributes into these continuum. In addition to the extracted object surfaces, the Gaussian-informed continuum also enables the rendering of object masks during simulations, serving as 2D-shape guidance for physical property estimation. Extensive experimental evaluations demonstrate that our pipeline achieves state-of-the-art performance across multiple benchmarks and metrics. Additionally, we illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed method through real-world demonstrations, showcasing its practical utility. Our project page is at https://jukgei.github.io/project/gic.