18,430 research outputs found
Structure fusion based on graph convolutional networks for semi-supervised classification
Suffering from the multi-view data diversity and complexity for
semi-supervised classification, most of existing graph convolutional networks
focus on the networks architecture construction or the salient graph structure
preservation, and ignore the the complete graph structure for semi-supervised
classification contribution. To mine the more complete distribution structure
from multi-view data with the consideration of the specificity and the
commonality, we propose structure fusion based on graph convolutional networks
(SF-GCN) for improving the performance of semi-supervised classification.
SF-GCN can not only retain the special characteristic of each view data by
spectral embedding, but also capture the common style of multi-view data by
distance metric between multi-graph structures. Suppose the linear relationship
between multi-graph structures, we can construct the optimization function of
structure fusion model by balancing the specificity loss and the commonality
loss. By solving this function, we can simultaneously obtain the fusion
spectral embedding from the multi-view data and the fusion structure as
adjacent matrix to input graph convolutional networks for semi-supervised
classification. Experiments demonstrate that the performance of SF-GCN
outperforms that of the state of the arts on three challenging datasets, which
are Cora,Citeseer and Pubmed in citation networks
Bayesian Semi-supervised Learning with Graph Gaussian Processes
We propose a data-efficient Gaussian process-based Bayesian approach to the
semi-supervised learning problem on graphs. The proposed model shows extremely
competitive performance when compared to the state-of-the-art graph neural
networks on semi-supervised learning benchmark experiments, and outperforms the
neural networks in active learning experiments where labels are scarce.
Furthermore, the model does not require a validation data set for early
stopping to control over-fitting. Our model can be viewed as an instance of
empirical distribution regression weighted locally by network connectivity. We
further motivate the intuitive construction of the model with a Bayesian linear
model interpretation where the node features are filtered by an operator
related to the graph Laplacian. The method can be easily implemented by
adapting off-the-shelf scalable variational inference algorithms for Gaussian
processes.Comment: To appear in NIPS 2018 Fixed an error in Figure 2. The previous arxiv
version contains two identical sub-figure
EEG-Based Emotion Recognition Using Regularized Graph Neural Networks
Electroencephalography (EEG) measures the neuronal activities in different
brain regions via electrodes. Many existing studies on EEG-based emotion
recognition do not fully exploit the topology of EEG channels. In this paper,
we propose a regularized graph neural network (RGNN) for EEG-based emotion
recognition. RGNN considers the biological topology among different brain
regions to capture both local and global relations among different EEG
channels. Specifically, we model the inter-channel relations in EEG signals via
an adjacency matrix in a graph neural network where the connection and
sparseness of the adjacency matrix are inspired by neuroscience theories of
human brain organization. In addition, we propose two regularizers, namely
node-wise domain adversarial training (NodeDAT) and emotion-aware distribution
learning (EmotionDL), to better handle cross-subject EEG variations and noisy
labels, respectively. Extensive experiments on two public datasets, SEED and
SEED-IV, demonstrate the superior performance of our model than
state-of-the-art models in most experimental settings. Moreover, ablation
studies show that the proposed adjacency matrix and two regularizers contribute
consistent and significant gain to the performance of our RGNN model. Finally,
investigations on the neuronal activities reveal important brain regions and
inter-channel relations for EEG-based emotion recognition
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