Yifan Huo

h-index3
2papers

2 Papers

LGJun 21, 2025Code
Towards a deeper GCN: Alleviate over-smoothing with iterative training and fine-tuning

Furong Peng, Jinzhen Gao, Xuan Lu et al.

Graph Convolutional Networks (GCNs) suffer from severe performance degradation in deep architectures due to over-smoothing. While existing studies primarily attribute the over-smoothing to repeated applications of graph Laplacian operators, our empirical analysis reveals a critical yet overlooked factor: trainable linear transformations in GCNs significantly exacerbate feature collapse, even at moderate depths (e.g., 8 layers). In contrast, Simplified Graph Convolution (SGC), which removes these transformations, maintains stable feature diversity up to 32 layers, highlighting linear transformations' dual role in facilitating expressive power and inducing over-smoothing. However, completely removing linear transformations weakens the model's expressive capacity. To address this trade-off, we propose Layer-wise Gradual Training (LGT), a novel training strategy that progressively builds deep GCNs while preserving their expressiveness. LGT integrates three complementary components: (1) layer-wise training to stabilize optimization from shallow to deep layers, (2) low-rank adaptation to fine-tune shallow layers and accelerate training, and (3) identity initialization to ensure smooth integration of new layers and accelerate convergence. Extensive experiments on benchmark datasets demonstrate that LGT achieves state-of-the-art performance on vanilla GCN, significantly improving accuracy even in 32-layer settings. Moreover, as a training method, LGT can be seamlessly combined with existing methods such as PairNorm and ContraNorm, further enhancing their performance in deeper networks. LGT offers a general, architecture-agnostic training framework for scalable deep GCNs. The code is available at [https://github.com/jfklasdfj/LGT_GCN].

9.1CLMar 28
SCOPE: Tree-based Self-Correcting Online Log Parsing via Syntactic-Semantic Collaboration

Dongyi Fan, Suqiong Zhang, Lili He et al.

Log parsing is a critical step for automated log analysis in complex systems. Traditional heuristic-based methods offer high efficiency but are limited in accuracy due to overlooking semantic context. In contrast, recent LLM-based parsers improve accuracy via se mantic understanding but incur high latency from frequent model calls. To address this, we propose SCOPE, the first self-correcting online log parsing method that integrates the strengths of both heuristic and LLM-based paradigms. SCOPE introduces a novel bi-directional tree structure that enables efficient template match ing from both forward and reverse directions, resulting in a higher overall matching rate. Additionally, it adopts a two-stage syntactic semantic collaboration framework: a lightweight NLP model first utilizes part-of-speech (POS) information for syntax-based match ing, while the LLM is selectively invoked as a fallback to handle semantically complex cases when uncertainty remains. This design significantly reduces LLM API usage while maintaining high ac curacy, achieving a balance between efficiency and effectiveness. Extensive evaluations on diverse benchmark datasets show that SCOPE outperforms state-of-the-art methods in both accuracy and efficiency. The implementation and datasets are publicly released to facilitate further research.