Hongjiang Chen

LG
h-index32
9papers
40citations
Novelty51%
AI Score55

9 Papers

68.3LGMay 19Code
ST-TGExplainer: Disentangling Stability and Transition Patterns for Temporal GNN Interpretability

Hongjiang Chen, Xin Zheng, Pengfei Jiao et al.

Temporal graph neural networks (TGNNs) have gained significant traction for solving real-world temporal graph tasks. However, their interpretability remains limited, as most TGNNs fail to identify which historical interactions most influence a given prediction. Despite promising progress on interpretable TGNNs, existing methods predominantly focus on previously seen historical interactions, which we term stability patterns, while overlooking newly emerging first-time interactions, which we term transition patterns. Both types of patterns are essential for faithful temporal explanations. To address this limitation, we propose ST-TGExplainer, a self-explainable TGNN that disentangles Stability and Transition patterns in temporal graphs for a more faithful Temporal GNN Explainer. Guided by a disentangled information bottleneck objective, ST-TGExplainer learns a compact explanatory subgraph that remains predictive of the event label while explicitly suppressing label-conditioned redundancy between stability and transition patterns. Extensive experiments demonstrate that ST-TGExplainer achieves strong predictive performance and yields more faithful explanations. Code is available at https://github.com/hjchen-hdu/ST-TGExplainer.

LGNov 7, 2023
Temporal Graph Representation Learning with Adaptive Augmentation Contrastive

Hongjiang Chen, Pengfei Jiao, Huijun Tang et al.

Temporal graph representation learning aims to generate low-dimensional dynamic node embeddings to capture temporal information as well as structural and property information. Current representation learning methods for temporal networks often focus on capturing fine-grained information, which may lead to the model capturing random noise instead of essential semantic information. While graph contrastive learning has shown promise in dealing with noise, it only applies to static graphs or snapshots and may not be suitable for handling time-dependent noise. To alleviate the above challenge, we propose a novel Temporal Graph representation learning with Adaptive augmentation Contrastive (TGAC) model. The adaptive augmentation on the temporal graph is made by combining prior knowledge with temporal information, and the contrastive objective function is constructed by defining the augmented inter-view contrast and intra-view contrast. To complement TGAC, we propose three adaptive augmentation strategies that modify topological features to reduce noise from the network. Our extensive experiments on various real networks demonstrate that the proposed model outperforms other temporal graph representation learning methods.

LGOct 16, 2022
HQNAS: Auto CNN deployment framework for joint quantization and architecture search

Hongjiang Chen, Yang Wang, Leibo Liu et al.

Deep learning applications are being transferred from the cloud to edge with the rapid development of embedded computing systems. In order to achieve higher energy efficiency with the limited resource budget, neural networks(NNs) must be carefully designed in two steps, the architecture design and the quantization policy choice. Neural Architecture Search(NAS) and Quantization have been proposed separately when deploying NNs onto embedded devices. However, taking the two steps individually is time-consuming and leads to a sub-optimal final deployment. To this end, we propose a novel neural network design framework called Hardware-aware Quantized Neural Architecture Search(HQNAS) framework which combines the NAS and Quantization together in a very efficient manner using weight-sharing and bit-sharing. It takes only 4 GPU hours to discover an outstanding NN policy on CIFAR10. It also takes only %10 GPU time to generate a comparable model on Imagenet compared to the traditional NAS method with 1.8x decrease of latency and a negligible accuracy loss of only 0.7%. Besides, our method can be adapted in a lifelong situation where the neural network needs to evolve occasionally due to changes of local data, environment and user preference.

84.6LGMay 24
TGFormer: Towards Temporal Graph Transformer with Auto-Correlation Mechanism

Hongjiang Chen, Pengfei Jiao, Ming Du et al.

The growing interest in Temporal Graph Neural Networks (TGNNs) stems from their ability to model complex dynamics and deliver superior performance. However, TGNNs encounter fundamental challenges in capturing long-term dependencies and identifying periodic patterns. To address these limitations, we propose TGFormer, a novel Transformer architecture specifically designed for temporal graphs. Our model redefines temporal graph learning by establishing a trajectory framework that aligns with time series analysis principles. This approach allows TGFormer to derive node representations through systematic analysis of historical interactions, enabling granular examination of node relationships across sequential timestamps. Building upon stochastic process theory, we develop an auto-correlation mechanism that systematically uncovers periodic dependencies in node interactions. This innovation empowers TGFormer to perform dependency discovery and representation aggregation at sub-interaction levels, demonstrating superior efficiency and accuracy compared to conventional attention mechanisms. Experimental validation across six public benchmarks confirms the effectiveness of our approach, with TGFormer at most achieving 9.35\% precision improvement compared to state-of-the-art approaches.

LGOct 16, 2022
FAQS: Communication-efficient Federate DNN Architecture and Quantization Co-Search for personalized Hardware-aware Preferences

Hongjiang Chen, Yang Wang, Leibo Liu et al.

Due to user privacy and regulatory restrictions, federate learning (FL) is proposed as a distributed learning framework for training deep neural networks (DNN) on decentralized data clients. Recent advancements in FL have applied Neural Architecture Search (NAS) to replace the predefined one-size-fit-all DNN model, which is not optimal for all tasks of various data distributions, with searchable DNN architectures. However, previous methods suffer from expensive communication cost rasied by frequent large model parameters transmission between the server and clients. Such difficulty is further amplified when combining NAS algorithms, which commonly require prohibitive computation and enormous model storage. Towards this end, we propose FAQS, an efficient personalized FL-NAS-Quantization framework to reduce the communication cost with three features: weight-sharing super kernels, bit-sharing quantization and masked transmission. FAQS has an affordable search time and demands very limited size of transmitted messages at each round. By setting different personlized pareto function loss on local clients, FAQS can yield heterogeneous hardware-aware models for various user preferences. Experimental results show that FAQS achieves average reduction of 1.58x in communication bandwith per round compared with normal FL framework and 4.51x compared with FL+NAS framwork.

79.0LGMar 20
GoAgent: Group-of-Agents Communication Topology Generation for LLM-based Multi-Agent Systems

Hongjiang Chen, Xin Zheng, Yixin Liu et al.

Large language model (LLM)-based multi-agent systems (MAS) have demonstrated exceptional capabilities in solving complex tasks, yet their effectiveness depends heavily on the underlying communication topology that coordinates agent interactions. Within these systems, successful problem-solving often necessitates task-specific group structures to divide and conquer subtasks. However, most existing approaches generate communication topologies in a node-centric manner, leaving group structures to emerge implicitly from local connectivity decisions rather than modeling them explicitly, often leading to suboptimal coordination and unnecessary communication overhead. To address this limitation, we propose GoAgent (Group-of-Agents), a communication topology generation method that explicitly treats collaborative groups as the atomic units of MAS construction. Specifically, GoAgent first enumerates task-relevant candidate groups through an LLM and then autoregressively selects and connects these groups as atomic units to construct the final communication graph, jointly capturing intra-group cohesion and inter-group coordination. To mitigate communication redundancy and noise propagation inherent in expanding topologies, we further introduce a conditional information bottleneck (CIB) objective that compresses inter-group communication, preserving task-relevant signals while filtering out redundant historical noise. Extensive experiments on six benchmarks demonstrate the state-of-the-art performance of GoAgent with 93.84% average accuracy while reducing token consumption by about 17%.

MAOct 22, 2025
ColorAgent: Building A Robust, Personalized, and Interactive OS Agent

Ning Li, Qiqiang Lin, Zheng Wu et al.

With the advancements in hardware, software, and large language model technologies, the interaction between humans and operating systems has evolved from the command-line interface to the rapidly emerging AI agent interactions. Building an operating system (OS) agent capable of executing user instructions and faithfully following user desires is becoming a reality. In this technical report, we present ColorAgent, an OS agent designed to engage in long-horizon, robust interactions with the environment while also enabling personalized and proactive user interaction. To enable long-horizon interactions with the environment, we enhance the model's capabilities through step-wise reinforcement learning and self-evolving training, while also developing a tailored multi-agent framework that ensures generality, consistency, and robustness. In terms of user interaction, we explore personalized user intent recognition and proactive engagement, positioning the OS agent not merely as an automation tool but as a warm, collaborative partner. We evaluate ColorAgent on the AndroidWorld and AndroidLab benchmarks, achieving success rates of 77.2% and 50.7%, respectively, establishing a new state of the art. Nonetheless, we note that current benchmarks are insufficient for a comprehensive evaluation of OS agents and propose further exploring directions in future work, particularly in the areas of evaluation paradigms, agent collaboration, and security.

LGJul 10, 2025
HGMP:Heterogeneous Graph Multi-Task Prompt Learning

Pengfei Jiao, Jialong Ni, Di Jin et al.

The pre-training and fine-tuning methods have gained widespread attention in the field of heterogeneous graph neural networks due to their ability to leverage large amounts of unlabeled data during the pre-training phase, allowing the model to learn rich structural features. However, these methods face the issue of a mismatch between the pre-trained model and downstream tasks, leading to suboptimal performance in certain application scenarios. Prompt learning methods have emerged as a new direction in heterogeneous graph tasks, as they allow flexible adaptation of task representations to address target inconsistency. Building on this idea, this paper proposes a novel multi-task prompt framework for the heterogeneous graph domain, named HGMP. First, to bridge the gap between the pre-trained model and downstream tasks, we reformulate all downstream tasks into a unified graph-level task format. Next, we address the limitations of existing graph prompt learning methods, which struggle to integrate contrastive pre-training strategies in the heterogeneous graph domain. We design a graph-level contrastive pre-training strategy to better leverage heterogeneous information and enhance performance in multi-task scenarios. Finally, we introduce heterogeneous feature prompts, which enhance model performance by refining the representation of input graph features. Experimental results on public datasets show that our proposed method adapts well to various tasks and significantly outperforms baseline methods.

LGMay 7, 2025
A Survey on Temporal Interaction Graph Representation Learning: Progress, Challenges, and Opportunities

Pengfei Jiao, Hongjiang Chen, Xuan Guo et al.

Temporal interaction graphs (TIGs), defined by sequences of timestamped interaction events, have become ubiquitous in real-world applications due to their capability to model complex dynamic system behaviors. As a result, temporal interaction graph representation learning (TIGRL) has garnered significant attention in recent years. TIGRL aims to embed nodes in TIGs into low-dimensional representations that effectively preserve both structural and temporal information, thereby enhancing the performance of downstream tasks such as classification, prediction, and clustering within constantly evolving data environments. In this paper, we begin by introducing the foundational concepts of TIGs and emphasize the critical role of temporal dependencies. We then propose a comprehensive taxonomy of state-of-the-art TIGRL methods, systematically categorizing them based on the types of information utilized during the learning process to address the unique challenges inherent to TIGs. To facilitate further research and practical applications, we curate the source of datasets and benchmarks, providing valuable resources for empirical investigations. Finally, we examine key open challenges and explore promising research directions in TIGRL, laying the groundwork for future advancements that have the potential to shape the evolution of this field.