LGMLDec 25, 2019

Neural Subgraph Isomorphism Counting

arXiv:1912.11589v393 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a computationally intensive graph analysis problem for researchers and practitioners, offering a scalable solution with practical applications in domains like mutagenic compound analysis.

The paper tackles the NP-complete problem of subgraph isomorphism counting by proposing a learning framework that speeds up traditional algorithms, achieving 10-1,000 times faster performance with acceptable errors.

In this paper, we study a new graph learning problem: learning to count subgraph isomorphisms. Different from other traditional graph learning problems such as node classification and link prediction, subgraph isomorphism counting is NP-complete and requires more global inference to oversee the whole graph. To make it scalable for large-scale graphs and patterns, we propose a learning framework which augments different representation learning architectures and iteratively attends pattern and target data graphs to memorize subgraph isomorphisms for the global counting. We develop both small graphs (<= 1,024 subgraph isomorphisms in each) and large graphs (<= 4,096 subgraph isomorphisms in each) sets to evaluate different models. A mutagenic compound dataset, MUTAG, is also used to evaluate neural models and demonstrate the success of transfer learning. While the learning based approach is inexact, we are able to generalize to count large patterns and data graphs in linear time compared to the exponential time of the original NP-complete problem. Experimental results show that learning based subgraph isomorphism counting can speed up the traditional algorithm, VF2, 10-1,000 times with acceptable errors. Domain adaptation based on fine-tuning also shows the usefulness of our approach in real-world applications.

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