LGAISIJun 14, 2021

Training Graph Neural Networks with 1000 Layers

arXiv:2106.07476v3294 citations
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses scalability issues for researchers and practitioners using GNNs on large graph datasets, representing a strong specific gain rather than a foundational breakthrough.

The paper tackles the memory complexity problem in training deep graph neural networks (GNNs) by using reversible connections and other techniques, enabling the training of overparameterized GNNs with up to 1001 layers on a single GPU and achieving ROC-AUC scores of 87.74 and 88.24 on the ogbn-proteins dataset.

Deep graph neural networks (GNNs) have achieved excellent results on various tasks on increasingly large graph datasets with millions of nodes and edges. However, memory complexity has become a major obstacle when training deep GNNs for practical applications due to the immense number of nodes, edges, and intermediate activations. To improve the scalability of GNNs, prior works propose smart graph sampling or partitioning strategies to train GNNs with a smaller set of nodes or sub-graphs. In this work, we study reversible connections, group convolutions, weight tying, and equilibrium models to advance the memory and parameter efficiency of GNNs. We find that reversible connections in combination with deep network architectures enable the training of overparameterized GNNs that significantly outperform existing methods on multiple datasets. Our models RevGNN-Deep (1001 layers with 80 channels each) and RevGNN-Wide (448 layers with 224 channels each) were both trained on a single commodity GPU and achieve an ROC-AUC of $87.74 \pm 0.13$ and $88.24 \pm 0.15$ on the ogbn-proteins dataset. To the best of our knowledge, RevGNN-Deep is the deepest GNN in the literature by one order of magnitude. Please visit our project website https://www.deepgcns.org/arch/gnn1000 for more information.

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