Kush Kothari

2papers

2 Papers

QMNov 22, 2023
Benchmarking Toxic Molecule Classification using Graph Neural Networks and Few Shot Learning

Bhavya Mehta, Kush Kothari, Reshmika Nambiar et al.

Traditional methods like Graph Convolutional Networks (GCNs) face challenges with limited data and class imbalance, leading to suboptimal performance in graph classification tasks during toxicity prediction of molecules as a whole. To address these issues, we harness the power of Graph Isomorphic Networks, Multi Headed Attention and Free Large-scale Adversarial Augmentation separately on Graphs for precisely capturing the structural data of molecules and their toxicological properties. Additionally, we incorporate Few-Shot Learning to improve the model's generalization with limited annotated samples. Extensive experiments on a diverse toxicology dataset demonstrate that our method achieves an impressive state-of-art AUC-ROC value of 0.816, surpassing the baseline GCN model by 11.4%. This highlights the significance of our proposed methodology and Few Shot Learning in advancing Toxic Molecular Classification, with the potential to enhance drug discovery and environmental risk assessment processes.

LGNov 21, 2023
Exploring Graph Classification Techniques Under Low Data Constraints: A Comprehensive Study

Kush Kothari, Bhavya Mehta, Reshmika Nambiar et al.

This survey paper presents a brief overview of recent research on graph data augmentation and few-shot learning. It covers various techniques for graph data augmentation, including node and edge perturbation, graph coarsening, and graph generation, as well as the latest developments in few-shot learning, such as meta-learning and model-agnostic meta-learning. The paper explores these areas in depth and delves into further sub classifications. Rule based approaches and learning based approaches are surveyed under graph augmentation techniques. Few-Shot Learning on graphs is also studied in terms of metric learning techniques and optimization-based techniques. In all, this paper provides an extensive array of techniques that can be employed in solving graph processing problems faced in low-data scenarios.