JOURNAL ARTICLE

Self-supervised Heterogeneous Graph Neural Network with Co-contrastive Learning

Abstract

Heterogeneous graph neural networks (HGNNs) as an emerging technique have shown superior capacity of dealing with heterogeneous information network (HIN). However, most HGNNs follow a semi-supervised learning manner, which notably limits their wide use in reality since labels are usually scarce in real applications. Recently, contrastive learning, a self-supervised method, becomes one of the most exciting learning paradigms and shows great potential when there are no labels. In this paper, we study the problem of self-supervised HGNNs and propose a novel co-contrastive learning mechanism for HGNNs, named HeCo. Different from traditional contrastive learning which only focuses on contrasting positive and negative samples, HeCo employs cross-view contrastive mechanism. Specifically, two views of a HIN (network schema and meta-path views) are proposed to learn node embeddings, so as to capture both of local and high-order structures simultaneously. Then the cross-view contrastive learning, as well as a view mask mechanism, is proposed, which is able to extract the positive and negative embeddings from two views. This enables the two views to collaboratively supervise each other and finally learn high-level node embeddings. Moreover, two extensions of HeCo are designed to generate harder negative samples with high quality, which further boosts the performance of HeCo. Extensive experiments conducted on a variety of real-world networks show the superior performance of the proposed methods over the state-of-the-arts.

Keywords:
Computer science Artificial intelligence Graph Artificial neural network Machine learning Theoretical computer science

Metrics

359
Cited By
35.84
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
31
Refs
1.00
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
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Citation History

Topics

Advanced Graph Neural Networks
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
Text and Document Classification Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
Recommender Systems and Techniques
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Information Systems

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