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 dyg-mamba


DyG-Mamba: Continuous State Space Modeling on Dynamic Graphs

Neural Information Processing Systems

Dynamic graph modeling aims to uncover evolutionary patterns in real-world systems, enabling accurate social recommendation and early detection of cancer cells. Inspired by the success of recent state space models in efficiently capturing long-term dependencies, we propose DyG-Mamba by translating dynamic graph modeling into a long-term sequence modeling problem. Specifically, inspired by Ebbinghaus' forgetting curve, we treat the irregular timespans between events as control signals, allowing DyG-Mamba to dynamically adjust the forgetting of historical information. This mechanism ensures effective usage of irregular timespans, thereby improving both model effectiveness and inductive capability. In addition, inspired by Ebbinghaus' review cycle, we redefine core parameters to ensure that DyG-Mamba selectively reviews historical information and filters out noisy inputs, further enhancing the model's robustness. Through exhaustive experiments on 12 datasets covering dynamic link prediction and node classification tasks, we show that DyG-Mamba achieves state-of-the-art performance on most datasets, while demonstrating significantly improved computational and memory efficiency.


DyG-Mamba: Continuous State Space Modeling on Dynamic Graphs

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Dynamic graph learning aims to uncover evolutionary laws in real-world systems, enabling accurate social recommendation (link prediction) or early detection of cancer cells (classification). Inspired by the success of state space models, e.g., Mamba, for efficiently capturing long-term dependencies in language modeling, we propose DyG-Mamba, a new continuous state space model (SSM) for dynamic graph learning. Specifically, we first found that using inputs as control signals for SSM is not suitable for continuous-time dynamic network data with irregular sampling intervals, resulting in models being insensitive to time information and lacking generalization properties. Drawing inspiration from the Ebbinghaus forgetting curve, which suggests that memory of past events is strongly correlated with time intervals rather than specific details of the events themselves, we directly utilize irregular time spans as control signals for SSM to achieve significant robustness and generalization. Through exhaustive experiments on 12 datasets for dynamic link prediction and dynamic node classification tasks, we found that DyG-Mamba achieves state-of-the-art performance on most of the datasets, while also demonstrating significantly improved computation and memory efficiency.