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Appendix for Diffusion Improves Graph Learning A Graph diffusion as a polynomial filter
L and use the binomial equation, i.e. To obtain a more convenient form for K we shift the summation index using m = k j, i.e. ξ All remaining nodes are part of the test set and only used once for testing. Different seeds are used for validation and test splits. The patience is reset after an increase in accuracy on the validation set. We use the same development set for optimizing the hyperparameters for clustering.
Diffusion Improves Graph Learning
Klicpera, Johannes, Weißenberger, Stefan, Günnemann, Stephan
Graph convolution is the core of most Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) and usually approximated by message passing between direct (one-hop) neighbors. In this work, we remove the restriction of using only the direct neighbors by introducing a powerful, yet spatially localized graph convolution: Graph diffusion convolution (GDC). GDC leverages generalized graph diffusion, examples of which are the heat kernel and personalized PageRank. It alleviates the problem of noisy and often arbitrarily defined edges in real graphs. We show that GDC is closely related to spectral-based models and thus combines the strengths of both spatial (message passing) and spectral methods. We demonstrate that replacing message passing with graph diffusion convolution consistently leads to significant performance improvements across a wide range of models on both supervised and unsupervised tasks and a variety of datasets. Furthermore, GDC is not limited to GNNs but can trivially be combined with any graph-based model or algorithm (e.g. spectral clustering) without requiring any changes to the latter or affecting its computational complexity. Our implementation is available online.
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