ML4Graphs 2022

Special Session on Machine Learning for Graphs at ICMLA 2022

The Bahamas, Caribbean

Submission deadline September 9, 2022!

Introduction

Graphs or networks are ubiquitous structures that appear in a multitude of complex systems like social networks, biological networks, knowledge graphs, world wide web, transportation networks, and many more. Real-world networks are massive and unstructured, apart from dynamic and multi-modal. Many existing domains can benefit from data analysis modelled as a networks problem that provide many computational and algorithmic challenges. Essentially, networks provide enormous potential to address long-standing scientific questions and particularly inform the design of several machine learning applications. Graph-based learning and reasoning approaches offer a way to integrate symbolic reasoning (which offer more interpretability) with the representation learning capabilities of deep neural networks to introduce causality, interpretability, and transferability.

The third year of Machine Learning for Graphs special session aims to bring researchers across disciplines to share their innovative ideas on machine learning for graphs and leverage existing methodologies across several application domains. This special session will also serve as a common ground to showcase recent advancements in ML for graphs, build collaborations across disciplines, share benchmark datasets for graph-based ML algorithm evaluation, and inspire machine learning for graphs research in domains where there are limitations in the existing approaches. Authors of the best papers from this special session will have an opportunity to extend their work and publish in selected journals.

Scope

We welcome novel research papers on the following algorithms and applications, including but not limited to:

Algorithms:

  • Graph representation learning

  • Hyperbolic graph embedding

  • Community detection

  • Node classification

  • Link prediction

  • ML on Signed networks

  • ML on multi-layer and heterogeneous networks

  • ML on knowledge graphs

  • ML on dynamic graphs and graph streams

  • ML on cascades and cascade growth

  • Network growth models

  • Graph summarization

  • Graph partitioning

  • Network fusion

  • Scalable ML algorithms for graphs

Applications:

  1. Computational social science

    • Social network analysis

    • Gender equality

    • Affective polarization

    • Echo chambers

    • Civil unrest

    • Fake news and misinformation spread

    • Hate speech and polarization

    • Population migration

  2. Computer Vision and Natural Language Processing

    • Question Answering using Knowledge Graphs and Deep Learning

    • Scene graph generation

    • Activity understanding from multimodal data

    • Image and Video captioning

    • Knowledge graphs for multimodal understanding

    • Neural-symbolic integration

    • Explainable methods for visual understanding

    • Common sense knowledge graph construction

    • Applying knowledge graph embeddings to real world scenarios

  3. Health

    • Health informatics and analytics

    • Health misinformation

    • Disease epidemics

    • Genomics

    • Population health

    • Synthetic population

    • Drug Discovery