FILDNE: A Framework for Incremental Learning of Dynamic Networks Embeddings
This work addresses the challenge of dynamic graph representation learning for applications requiring efficient updates, though it is incremental as it builds on existing static methods.
The authors tackled the problem of learning node embeddings for evolving graphs by proposing FILDNE, a framework that integrates static representation learning methods over time steps, which reduced memory and computational costs while providing competitive quality gains on seven real-world datasets.
Representation learning on graphs has emerged as a powerful mechanism to automate feature vector generation for downstream machine learning tasks. The advances in representation on graphs have centered on both homogeneous and heterogeneous graphs, where the latter presenting the challenges associated with multi-typed nodes and/or edges. In this paper, we consider the additional challenge of evolving graphs. We ask the question of whether the advances in representation learning for static graphs can be leveraged for dynamic graphs and how? It is important to be able to incorporate those advances to maximize the utility and generalization of methods. To that end, we propose the Framework for Incremental Learning of Dynamic Networks Embedding (FILDNE), which can utilize any existing static representation learning method for learning node embeddings, while keeping the computational costs low. FILDNE integrates the feature vectors computed using the standard methods over different timesteps into a single representation by developing a convex combination function and alignment mechanism. Experimental results on several downstream tasks, over seven real-world data sets, show that FILDNE is able to reduce memory and computational time costs while providing competitive quality measure gains with respect to the contemporary methods for representation learning on dynamic graphs.