4.8 Article

Fuzzy Representation Learning on Graph

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON FUZZY SYSTEMS
Volume 31, Issue 10, Pages 3358-3370

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TFUZZ.2023.3253291

Keywords

Fuzzy logic; fuzzy representation; graph convolutional network; graph representation

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In recent years, there has been a significant increase in graph representation learning. This article proposes an unsupervised fuzzy representation learning model that improves the expressiveness of graphs and networks by making crisp representations fuzzy. The model utilizes fuzzy logic to fully explore feature-level uncertainties and generate fuzzy representations that are more expressive than crisp ones.
Recent years have witnessed a drastic surge in graph representation learning, which usually produces low-dimensional and crisp representations from graph topology and high-dimensional node attributes. Nevertheless, a crisp representation of a node or graph actually conceals the uncertainty and interpretability of features. In citation networks, for example, the reference between the two papers is always involved with fuzziness denoting the correlation degrees, that is, one connection may simultaneously belong to strong and weak references in different beliefs. The uncertainty in node connections and attributes inspires us to delve into fuzzy representations. This article, for the first time, proposes an unsupervised fuzzy representation learning model for graphs and networks to improve their expressiveness by making crisp representations fuzzy. Specifically, we develop a fuzzy graph convolution neural network (FGCNN), which could aggregate high-level fuzzy features, leveraging fuzzy logic to fully excavate feature-level uncertainties, and finally generate fuzzy representations. The corresponding hierarchical model composed of multiple FGCNNs, called deep fuzzy graph convolution neural network (DFGCNN), is able to generate fuzzy node representations which are more expressive than crisp ones. Experimental results of multiple network analysis tasks validate that the proposed fuzzy representation models have strong competitiveness against the state-of-the-art baselines over several real-world datasets.

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