Advancing Community Detection with Graph Convolutional Neural Networks: Bridging Topological and Attributive Cohesion
de Silva, Anjali, Chen, Gang, Ma, Hui, Nekooei, Seyed Mohammad, Zuo, Xingquan
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Community detection, a vital technology for real-world applications, uncovers cohesive node groups (communities) by leveraging both topological and attribute similarities in social networks. However, existing Graph Convolutional Networks (GCNs) trained to maximize modularity often converge to suboptimal solutions. Additionally, directly using human-labeled communities for training can undermine topological cohesiveness by grouping disconnected nodes based solely on node attributes. We address these issues by proposing a novel Topological and Attributive Similarity-based Community detection (TAS-Com) method. TAS-Com introduces a novel loss function that exploits the highly effective and scalable Leiden algorithm to detect community structures with global optimal modularity. Leiden is further utilized to refine human-labeled communities to ensure connectivity within each community, enabling TAS-Com to detect community structures with desirable trade-offs between modularity and compliance with human labels. Experimental results on multiple benchmark networks confirm that TAS-Com can significantly outperform several state-of-the-art algorithms.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
May-16-2025
- Country:
- Oceania > New Zealand
- North Island > Wellington Region > Wellington (0.04)
- Europe > Netherlands
- South Holland > Leiden (0.47)
- Asia
- Oceania > New Zealand
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (1.00)
- Industry:
- Information Technology (0.49)
- Technology:
- Information Technology
- Data Science > Data Mining (1.00)
- Communications (0.89)
- Artificial Intelligence
- Representation & Reasoning (1.00)
- Machine Learning
- Neural Networks (1.00)
- Evolutionary Systems (0.67)
- Statistical Learning > Clustering (0.47)
- Information Technology