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Semisupervised Community Preserving Network Embedding with Pairwise Constraints.

Authors :
Liu, Dong
Ru, Yan
Li, Qinpeng
Wang, Shibin
Niu, Jianwei
Source :
Complexity; 11/10/2020, p1-14, 14p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Network embedding aims to learn the low-dimensional representations of nodes in networks. It preserves the structure and internal attributes of the networks while representing nodes as low-dimensional dense real-valued vectors. These vectors are used as inputs of machine learning algorithms for network analysis tasks such as node clustering, classification, link prediction, and network visualization. The network embedding algorithms, which considered the community structure, impose a higher level of constraint on the similarity of nodes, and they make the learned node embedding results more discriminative. However, the existing network representation learning algorithms are mostly unsupervised models; the pairwise constraint information, which represents community membership, is not effectively utilized to obtain node embedding results that are more consistent with prior knowledge. This paper proposes a semisupervised modularized nonnegative matrix factorization model, SMNMF, while preserving the community structure for network embedding; the pairwise constraints (must-link and cannot-link) information are effectively fused with the adjacency matrix and node similarity matrix of the network so that the node representations learned by the model are more interpretable. Experimental results on eight real network datasets show that, comparing with the representative network embedding methods, the node representations learned after incorporating the pairwise constraints can obtain higher accuracy in node clustering task and the results of link prediction, and network visualization tasks indicate that the semisupervised model SMNMF is more discriminative than unsupervised ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10762787
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Complexity
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146928085
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/7953758