LGDSJul 30, 2024

Joint Diffusion Processes as an Inductive Bias in Sheaf Neural Networks

arXiv:2407.20597v110 citationsh-index: 5
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses performance issues in SNNs for graph-based learning, offering incremental improvements in sheaf computation methods.

The authors tackled the problem of improving Sheaf Neural Networks (SNNs) for heterophily and oversmoothing by proposing two novel sheaf learning approaches that provide intuitive structure maps, introduce inductive biases, and reduce parameter scaling, with evaluation on new synthetic datasets revealing insights into SNN benefits.

Sheaf Neural Networks (SNNs) naturally extend Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) by endowing a cellular sheaf over the graph, equipping nodes and edges with vector spaces and defining linear mappings between them. While the attached geometric structure has proven to be useful in analyzing heterophily and oversmoothing, so far the methods by which the sheaf is computed do not always guarantee a good performance in such settings. In this work, drawing inspiration from opinion dynamics concepts, we propose two novel sheaf learning approaches that (i) provide a more intuitive understanding of the involved structure maps, (ii) introduce a useful inductive bias for heterophily and oversmoothing, and (iii) infer the sheaf in a way that does not scale with the number of features, thus using fewer learnable parameters than existing methods. In our evaluation, we show the limitations of the real-world benchmarks used so far on SNNs, and design a new synthetic task -- leveraging the symmetries of n-dimensional ellipsoids -- that enables us to better assess the strengths and weaknesses of sheaf-based models. Our extensive experimentation on these novel datasets reveals valuable insights into the scenarios and contexts where SNNs in general -- and our proposed approaches in particular -- can be beneficial.

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