Engineer friends often ask me: Graph Deep Learning sounds great, but are there any big commercial success stories? Is it being deployed in practical applications? Besides the obvious ones–recommendation systems at Pinterest, Alibaba and Twitter–a slightly nuanced success story is the Transformer architecture, which has taken the NLP industry by storm. Through this post, I want to establish links between Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) and Transformers. I’ll talk about the intuitions behind model architectures in the NLP and GNN communities, make connections using equations and figures, and discuss how we could work together to drive progress.
Our mission is to leverage the methods of machine learning and game theory for addressing relevant applications both in recreational games and in abstract decision games played in the real world.
Gephi is an open-source software for visualizing and analyzing large networks graphs. Gephi uses a 3D render engine to display graphs in real-time and speed up the exploration. Use Gephi to explore, analyse, spatialise, filter, cluterize, manipulate and export all types of graphs.
Visualization of graph data is incredibly challenging, particularly when it comes to extremely large, scale-free graphs and social networks. A few simple searches on the Web and you will find some mesmerizing and very cool images. Perhaps the most cited...
F. Otto, M. Ring, D. Landes, and A. Hotho. ECCWS2016-Proceedings fo the 15th European Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, page 437. Academic Conferences and publishing limited, (2016)
A. Traud, P. Mucha, and M. Porter. (2011)cite arxiv:1102.2166
Comment: 82 pages (including many pages of tables), 8 multi-part figures,
"Facebook100" data used in this paper is publicly available at
http://people.maths.ox.ac.uk/~porterm/data/facebook100.zip.
B. Berendt, A. Hotho, and G. Stumme. Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web, 8 (2-3):
95 - 96(2010)Bridging the Gap--Data Mining and Social Network Analysis for Integrating Semantic Web and Web 2.0; The Future of Knowledge Dissemination: The Elsevier Grand Challenge for the Life Sciences.
C. Schmitz, A. Hotho, R. Jäschke, and G. Stumme. Data Science and Classification (Proc. IFCS 2006 Conference), page 261-270. Berlin/Heidelberg, Springer, (July 2006)Ljubljana.
S. Maslov, and S. Redner. (2009)cite arxiv:0901.2640
Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, invited comment for the Journal of Neuroscience.
The arxiv version is microscopically different from the published version.
X. Xu, N. Yuruk, Z. Feng, and T. Schweiger. KDD '07: Proceedings of the 13th ACM SIGKDD international conference on Knowledge discovery and data mining, page 824--833. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2007)
R. Jäschke, B. Krause, A. Hotho, and G. Stumme. Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Weblogs and Social Media(ICWSM 2008), AAAI Press, (2008)
B. Hoser, A. Hotho, R. Jäschke, C. Schmitz, and G. Stumme. Proceedings of the 3rd European Semantic Web Conference, volume 4011 of LNCS, page 514-529. Budva, Montenegro, Springer, (June 2006)
G. Salton, and C. Buckley. SIGIR '88: Proceedings of the 11th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval, page 147--160. New York, NY, USA, ACM Press, (1988)
Y. Jin, Y. Matsuo, and M. Ishizuka. Proceedings of the European Semantic Web Conference, ESWC2007, volume 4519 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Springer-Verlag, (July 2007)