Abstract
Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) have become the state-of-the-art method for many applications on graph structured data. GNNs are a model for graph representation learning, which aims at learning to generate low dimensional node embeddings that encapsulate structural and feature-related information. GNNs are usually trained in an end-to-end fashion, leading to highly specialized node embeddings. While this approach achieves great results in the single-task setting, the generation of node embeddings that can be used to perform multiple tasks (with performance comparable to single-task models) is still an open problem. We propose the use of meta-learning to allow the training of a GNN model capable of producing multi-task node embeddings. In particular, we exploit the properties of optimization-based meta-learning to learn GNNs that can produce general node representations by learning parameters that can quickly (i.e. with a few steps of gradient descent) adapt to multiple tasks. Our experiments show that the embeddings produced by a model trained with our purposely designed meta-learning procedure can be used to perform multiple tasks with comparable or, surprisingly, even higher performance than both single-task and multi-task end-to-end models.
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