Abstract

In recent years, substantial progress has been made on Graph Convolutional Networks (GCNs). However, the computing of GCN usually requires a large memory space for keeping the entire graph. In consequence, GCN is not flexible enough, especially for large scale graphs in complex real-world applications. Fortunately, for transductive graph representation learning, methods based on Matrix Factorization (MF) naturally support constructing mini-batches, and thus are more friendly to distributed computing compared with GCN. Accordingly, in this paper, we analyze the connections between GCN and MF, and simplify GCN as matrix factorization with unitization and co-training. Furthermore, under the guidance of our analysis, we propose an alternative model to GCN named Unitized and Co-training Matrix Factorization (UCMF). Extensive experiments have been conducted on several real-world datasets. On the task of semi-supervised node classification, the experimental results illustrate that UCMF achieves similar or superior performances compared with GCN. Meanwhile, distributed UCMF significantly outperforms distributed GCN methods, which shows that UCMF can greatly benefit complex real-world applications.

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