LGSIAug 18, 2023

Transitivity-Preserving Graph Representation Learning for Bridging Local Connectivity and Role-based Similarity

arXiv:2308.09517v125 citationsh-index: 9Has Code
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses the limitation of existing methods that ignore long-range dependencies and node roles in graph analysis, offering a more comprehensive approach for tasks like node classification and link prediction.

The paper tackles the problem of graph representation learning by integrating local connectivity and global role-based similarity, proposing Unified Graph Transformer Networks (UGT) that outperform state-of-the-art baselines on benchmark datasets and achieve expressive power equivalent to the third-order Weisfeiler-Lehman isomorphism test.

Graph representation learning (GRL) methods, such as graph neural networks and graph transformer models, have been successfully used to analyze graph-structured data, mainly focusing on node classification and link prediction tasks. However, the existing studies mostly only consider local connectivity while ignoring long-range connectivity and the roles of nodes. In this paper, we propose Unified Graph Transformer Networks (UGT) that effectively integrate local and global structural information into fixed-length vector representations. First, UGT learns local structure by identifying the local substructures and aggregating features of the $k$-hop neighborhoods of each node. Second, we construct virtual edges, bridging distant nodes with structural similarity to capture the long-range dependencies. Third, UGT learns unified representations through self-attention, encoding structural distance and $p$-step transition probability between node pairs. Furthermore, we propose a self-supervised learning task that effectively learns transition probability to fuse local and global structural features, which could then be transferred to other downstream tasks. Experimental results on real-world benchmark datasets over various downstream tasks showed that UGT significantly outperformed baselines that consist of state-of-the-art models. In addition, UGT reaches the expressive power of the third-order Weisfeiler-Lehman isomorphism test (3d-WL) in distinguishing non-isomorphic graph pairs. The source code is available at https://github.com/NSLab-CUK/Unified-Graph-Transformer.

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