Position: Future Directions in the Theory of Graph Machine Learning
Abstract
Machine learning on graphs, especially using graph neural networks (GNNs), has seen a surge in interest due to the wide availability of graph data across a broad spectrum of disciplines, from life to social and engineering sciences. Despite their practical success, our theoretical understanding of the properties of GNNs remains highly incomplete. Recent theoretical advancements primarily focus on elucidating the coarse-grained expressive power of GNNs, predominantly employing combinatorial techniques. However, these studies do not perfectly align with practice, particularly in understanding the generalization behavior of GNNs when trained with stochastic first-order optimization techniques. In this position paper, we argue that the graph machine learning community needs to shift its attention to developing a balanced theory of graph machine learning, focusing on a more thorough understanding of the interplay of expressive power, generalization, and optimization.
Cite
Text
Morris et al. "Position: Future Directions in the Theory of Graph Machine Learning." International Conference on Machine Learning, 2024.Markdown
[Morris et al. "Position: Future Directions in the Theory of Graph Machine Learning." International Conference on Machine Learning, 2024.](https://mlanthology.org/icml/2024/morris2024icml-position/)BibTeX
@inproceedings{morris2024icml-position,
title = {{Position: Future Directions in the Theory of Graph Machine Learning}},
author = {Morris, Christopher and Frasca, Fabrizio and Dym, Nadav and Maron, Haggai and Ceylan, Ismail Ilkan and Levie, Ron and Lim, Derek and Bronstein, Michael M. and Grohe, Martin and Jegelka, Stefanie},
booktitle = {International Conference on Machine Learning},
year = {2024},
pages = {36294-36307},
volume = {235},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/icml/2024/morris2024icml-position/}
}