SOTAVerified

Graph Learning

Graph learning is a branch of machine learning that focuses on the analysis and interpretation of data represented in graph form. In this context, a graph is a collection of nodes (or vertices) and edges, where nodes represent entities and edges represent the relationships or interactions between these entities. This structure is particularly useful for modeling complex networks found in various domains such as social networks, biological networks, and communication networks.

Graph learning leverages the relationships and structures within the graph to learn and make predictions. It includes techniques like graph neural networks (GNNs), which extend the concept of neural networks to handle graph-structured data. These models are adept at capturing the dependencies and influence of connected nodes, leading to more accurate predictions in scenarios where relationships play a key role.

Key applications of graph learning include recommender systems, drug discovery, social network analysis, and fraud detection. By utilizing the inherent structure of graph data, graph learning algorithms can uncover deep insights and patterns that are not apparent with traditional machine learning approaches.

Papers

Showing 12611270 of 1570 papers

TitleStatusHype
Learning from Counterfactual Links for Link PredictionCode1
A Survey on Optimal Transport for Machine Learning: Theory and Applications0
Learning Clause Representation from Dependency-Anchor Graph for Connective PredictionCode0
Mixup for Node and Graph ClassificationCode1
_2-norm Flow Diffusion in Near-Linear Time0
Spatio-Temporal Dual Graph Neural Networks for Travel Time Estimation0
Improving Facial Attribute Recognition by Group and Graph Learning0
Adversarial Attack Framework on Graph Embedding Models with Limited Knowledge0
Local, global and scale-dependent node rolesCode0
Federated Graph Learning -- A Position Paper0
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Benchmark Results

#ModelMetricClaimedVerifiedStatus
1HaloGraphNetR^20.97Unverified