4.7 Article

Learnable Graph Convolutional Network With Semisupervised Graph Information Bottleneck

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNNLS.2023.3322739

Keywords

Graph convolutional network (GCN); graph information bottleneck; graph learning; mutual information; semisupervised learning

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This article proposes a learnable GCN-based framework to obtain optimal graph structures and designs dual-GCN-based meta-channels to explore local and global relations. The introduction of SGIB maximizes the mutual information between the same and different meta-channels, improving node classification performance.
Graph convolutional network (GCN) has gained widespread attention in semisupervised classification tasks. Recent studies show that GCN-based methods have achieved decent performance in numerous fields. However, most of the existing methods generally adopted a fixed graph that cannot dynamically capture both local and global relationships. This is because the hidden and important relationships may not be directed exhibited in the fixed structure, causing the degraded performance of semisupervised classification tasks. Moreover, the missing and noisy data yielded by the fixed graph may result in wrong connections, thereby disturbing the representation learning process. To cope with these issues, this article proposes a learnable GCN-based framework, aiming to obtain the optimal graph structures by jointly integrating graph learning and feature propagation in a unified network. Besides, to capture the optimal graph representations, this article designs dual-GCN-based meta-channels to simultaneously explore local and global relations during the training process. To minimize the interference of the noisy data, a semisupervised graph information bottleneck (SGIB) is introduced to conduct the graph structural learning (GSL) for acquiring the minimal sufficient representations. Concretely, SGIB aims to maximize the mutual information of both the same and different meta-channels by designing the constraints between them, thereby improving the node classification performance in the downstream tasks. Extensive experimental results on real-world datasets demonstrate the robustness of the proposed model, which outperforms state-of-the-art methods with fixed-structure graphs.

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