Adversarial heterogeneous network embedding with metapath attention mechanism
- Authors: Ruan, Chunyang , Wang, Ye , Ma, Jiangang , Zhang, Yanchun , Chen, Xintian
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Computer Science and Technology Vol. 34, no. 6 (2019), p. 1217-1229
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- Description: Heterogeneous information network (HIN)-structured data provide an effective model for practical purposes in real world. Network embedding is fundamental for supporting the network-based analysis and prediction tasks. Methods of network embedding that are currently popular normally fail to effectively preserve the semantics of HIN. In this study, we propose AGA2Vec, a generative adversarial model for HIN embedding that uses attention mechanisms and meta-paths. To capture the semantic information from multi-typed entities and relations in HIN, we develop a weighted meta-path strategy to preserve the proximity of HIN. We then use an autoencoder and a generative adversarial model to obtain robust representations of HIN. The results of experiments on several real-world datasets show that the proposed approach outperforms state-of-the-art approaches for HIN embedding. © 2019, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC & Science Press, China.
Venue topic model-enhanced joint graph modelling for citation recommendation in scholarly big data
- Authors: Wang, Wei , Gong, Zhiguo , Ren, Jing , Xia, Feng , Lv, Zhihan , Wei, Wei
- Date: 2021
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: ACM Transactions on Asian and Low-Resource Language Information Processing Vol. 20, no. 1 (2021), p.
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- Description: Natural language processing technologies, such as topic models, have been proven to be effective for scholarly recommendation tasks with the ability to deal with content information. Recently, venue recommendation is becoming an increasingly important research task due to the unprecedented number of publication venues. However, traditional methods focus on either the author's local network or author-venue similarity, where the multiple relationships between scholars and venues are overlooked, especially the venue-venue interaction. To solve this problem, we propose an author topic model-enhanced joint graph modeling approach that consists of venue topic modeling, venue-specific topic influence modeling, and scholar preference modeling. We first model the venue topic with Latent Dirichlet Allocation. Then, we model the venue-specific topic influence in an asymmetric and low-dimensional way by considering the topic similarity between venues, the top-influence of venues, and the top-susceptibility of venues. The top-influence characterizes venues' capacity of exerting topic influence on other venues. The top-susceptibility captures venues' propensity of being topically influenced by other venues. Extensive experiments on two real-world datasets show that our proposed joint graph modeling approach outperforms the state-of-The-Art methods. © 2020 ACM.