Skip to yearly menu bar Skip to main content


Spotlight
in
Workshop: New Frontiers in Graph Learning (GLFrontiers)

Motif-aware Attribute Masking for Molecular Graph Pre-training

Eric Inae · Gang Liu · Meng Jiang

Keywords: [ Graph learning ] [ Motifs ] [ Molecular Property Prediction ] [ Self-supervised learning ]


Abstract:

Attribute reconstruction is used to predict node or edge features in the pre-training of graph neural networks. Given a large number of molecules, they learn to capture structural knowledge, which is transferable for various downstream property prediction tasks and vital in chemistry, biomedicine, and material science. Previous strategies that randomly select nodes to do attribute masking leverage the information of local neighbors. However, the over-reliance of these neighbors inhibits the model's ability to learn long-range dependencies from higher-level substructures. For example, the model would learn little from predicting three carbon atoms in a benzene ring based on the other three but could learn more from the inter-connections between the functional groups, or called chemical motifs. In this work, we propose and investigate motif-aware attribute masking strategies to capture long-range inter-motif structures by leveraging the information of atoms in neighboring motifs. Once each graph is decomposed into disjoint motifs, the features for every node within a sample motif are masked. The graph decoder then predicts the masked features of each node within the motif for reconstruction. We evaluate our approach on eight molecular property prediction datasets and demonstrate its advantages.

Chat is not available.