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Collaborating Authors

 Jin, Xurui


Rethinking Explaining Graph Neural Networks via Non-parametric Subgraph Matching

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The success of graph neural networks (GNNs) provokes the question about explainability: ``Which fraction of the input graph is the most determinant of the prediction?'' Particularly, parametric explainers prevail in existing approaches because of their more robust capability to decipher the black-box (i.e., target GNNs). In this paper, based on the observation that graphs typically share some common motif patterns, we propose a novel non-parametric subgraph matching framework, dubbed MatchExplainer, to explore explanatory subgraphs. It couples the target graph with other counterpart instances and identifies the most crucial joint substructure by minimizing the node corresponding-based distance. Moreover, we note that present graph sampling or node-dropping methods usually suffer from the false positive sampling problem. To alleviate this issue, we designed a new augmentation paradigm named MatchDrop. It takes advantage of MatchExplainer to fix the most informative portion of the graph and merely operates graph augmentations on the rest less informative part. Extensive experiments on synthetic and real-world datasets show the effectiveness of our MatchExplainer by outperforming all state-of-the-art parametric baselines with significant margins. Results also demonstrate that MatchDrop is a general scheme to be equipped with GNNs for enhanced performance. The code is available at: https://github.com/smiles724/MatchExplainer.


Prompt-Guided Injection of Conformation to Pre-trained Protein Model

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Pre-trained protein models (PTPMs) represent a protein with one fixed embedding and thus are not capable for diverse tasks. For example, protein structures can shift, namely protein folding, between several conformations in various biological processes. To enable PTPMs to produce task-aware representations, we propose to learn interpretable, pluggable and extensible protein prompts as a way of injecting task-related knowledge into PTPMs. In this regard, prior PTPM optimization with the masked language modeling task can be interpreted as learning a sequence prompt (Seq prompt) that enables PTPMs to capture the sequential dependency between amino acids. To incorporate conformational knowledge to PTPMs, we propose an interaction-conformation prompt (IC prompt) that is learned through back-propagation with the protein-protein interaction task. As an instantiation, we present a conformation-aware pre-trained protein model that learns both sequence and interaction-conformation prompts in a multi-task setting. We conduct comprehensive experiments on nine protein datasets. Results confirm our expectation that using the sequence prompt does not hurt PTPMs' performance on sequence-related tasks while incorporating the interaction-conformation prompt significantly improves PTPMs' performance on tasks where conformational knowledge counts. We also show the learned prompts can be combined and extended to deal with new complex tasks.