Jonas De Schouwer

2papers

2 Papers

50.2LGApr 4
k-Maximum Inner Product Attention for Graph Transformers and the Expressive Power of GraphGPS The Expressive Power of GraphGPS

Jonas De Schouwer, Haitz Sáez de Ocáriz Borde, Xiaowen Dong

Graph transformers have shown promise in overcoming limitations of traditional graph neural networks, such as oversquashing and difficulties in modelling long-range dependencies. However, their application to large-scale graphs is hindered by the quadratic memory and computational complexity of the all-to-all attention mechanism. Although alternatives such as linearized attention and restricted attention patterns have been proposed, these often degrade performance or limit expressive power. To better balance efficiency and effectiveness, we introduce k-Maximum Inner Product (k-MIP) attention for graph transformers. k-MIP attention selects the most relevant key nodes per query via a top-k operation, yielding a sparse yet flexible attention pattern. Combined with an attention score computation based on symbolic matrices, this results in linear memory complexity and practical speedups of up to an order of magnitude compared to all-to-all attention, enabling the processing of graphs with over 500k nodes on a single A100 GPU. We provide a theoretical analysis of expressive power, showing that k-MIP attention does not compromise the expressiveness of graph transformers: specifically, we prove that k-MIP transformers can approximate any full-attention transformer to arbitrary precision. In addition, we analyze the expressive power of the GraphGPS framework, in which we integrate our attention mechanism, and establish an upper bound on its graph distinguishing capability in terms of the S-SEG-WL test. Finally, we validate our approach on the Long Range Graph Benchmark, the City-Networks benchmark, and two custom large-scale inductive point cloud datasets, consistently ranking among the top-performing scalable graph transformers.

56.3ARApr 9
The Hyperscale Lottery: How State-Space Models Have Sacrificed Edge Efficiency

Robin Geens, Jonas De Schouwer, Marian Verhelst et al.

The Hardware Lottery posits that research directions are dictated by available silicon compute platforms. We identify a derivative phenomenon, the Hyperscale Lottery, where model architectures are optimized for cloud throughput at the expense of algorithmic efficiency. While State-Space Models (SSMs) such as Mamba were lauded for their linear complexity, ideal for edge intelligence, their evolution from Mamba-1 to Mamba-3 reveals a systematic divergence from edge-native efficiency. We demonstrate that Mamba-3's architectural changes, designed to saturate hyperscale GPUs, impose a significant edge penalty: a 28% latency increase at 880M parameters, worsening to 48% for 15M-parameter models. We argue for decoupling cloud-scale saturation strategies from core architectural design to preserve the viability of single-user, real-time edge intelligence.