Synergistic Fusion of Graph and Transformer Features for Enhanced Molecular Property Prediction
This addresses a critical task in computational drug discovery by improving prediction accuracy for molecular properties, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing Graph-Transformer fusion approaches.
The paper tackles molecular property prediction by proposing SYN-FUSION, which synergistically combines pre-trained GNN and Transformer features to capture both global structure and atom characteristics, achieving superior performance on MoleculeNet benchmarks (surpassing previous models in 5/7 classification and 4/6 regression datasets).
Molecular property prediction is a critical task in computational drug discovery. While recent advances in Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) and Transformers have shown to be effective and promising, they face the following limitations: Transformer self-attention does not explicitly consider the underlying molecule structure while GNN feature representation alone is not sufficient to capture granular and hidden interactions and characteristics that distinguish similar molecules. To address these limitations, we propose SYN- FUSION, a novel approach that synergistically combines pre-trained features from GNNs and Transformers. This approach provides a comprehensive molecular representation, capturing both the global molecule structure and the individual atom characteristics. Experimental results on MoleculeNet benchmarks demonstrate superior performance, surpassing previous models in 5 out of 7 classification datasets and 4 out of 6 regression datasets. The performance of SYN-FUSION has been compared with other Graph-Transformer models that have been jointly trained using a combination of transformer and graph features, and it is found that our approach is on par with those models in terms of performance. Extensive analysis of the learned fusion model across aspects such as loss, latent space, and weight distribution further validates the effectiveness of SYN-FUSION. Finally, an ablation study unequivocally demonstrates that the synergy achieved by SYN-FUSION surpasses the performance of its individual model components and their ensemble, offering a substantial improvement in predicting molecular properties.