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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yang, Songbo
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.18492
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author Yang, Songbo
author_facet Yang, Songbo
contents With the widespread use of online social media platforms, information diffusion has become a prevalent phenomenon, making Information Diffusion Prediction (IDP) increasingly important for various applications. Despite significant advancements in IDP research, existing methods often overlook issues of noise and sparsity in information diffusion data. User behaviors are frequently influenced by external factors, introducing noise into the data and hindering models' understanding of true diffusion patterns. Additionally, many users have limited interaction data, leading to data sparsity and restricting models' ability to effectively capture user preferences. To address these challenges, we propose a novel framework called DDiff, which tackles noise and sparsity issues through denoising diffusion and cross-domain contrastive learning. First, we introduce a graph learning encoder module that captures the social homophily of users through their relationships and higher-order connections via information diffusion hypergraphs (IDH). Next, a cross-domain contrastive learning module is designed to facilitate effective knowledge transfer between the information and social domains, addressing the sparsity problem. Furthermore, we propose a denoising diffusion module with IDH to effectively mitigate noise issues by introducing random noise in the forward process and iteratively recovering the corrupted embeddings in the reverse process. Finally, we implement a prediction module to determine the likelihood of subsequent users becoming infected. Experimental results demonstrate that DDiff significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods in the information diffusion prediction task.
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spellingShingle Improving Information Diffusion Prediction by Tackling Noise and Sparsity Challenges
Yang, Songbo
Social and Information Networks
With the widespread use of online social media platforms, information diffusion has become a prevalent phenomenon, making Information Diffusion Prediction (IDP) increasingly important for various applications. Despite significant advancements in IDP research, existing methods often overlook issues of noise and sparsity in information diffusion data. User behaviors are frequently influenced by external factors, introducing noise into the data and hindering models' understanding of true diffusion patterns. Additionally, many users have limited interaction data, leading to data sparsity and restricting models' ability to effectively capture user preferences. To address these challenges, we propose a novel framework called DDiff, which tackles noise and sparsity issues through denoising diffusion and cross-domain contrastive learning. First, we introduce a graph learning encoder module that captures the social homophily of users through their relationships and higher-order connections via information diffusion hypergraphs (IDH). Next, a cross-domain contrastive learning module is designed to facilitate effective knowledge transfer between the information and social domains, addressing the sparsity problem. Furthermore, we propose a denoising diffusion module with IDH to effectively mitigate noise issues by introducing random noise in the forward process and iteratively recovering the corrupted embeddings in the reverse process. Finally, we implement a prediction module to determine the likelihood of subsequent users becoming infected. Experimental results demonstrate that DDiff significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods in the information diffusion prediction task.
title Improving Information Diffusion Prediction by Tackling Noise and Sparsity Challenges
topic Social and Information Networks
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.18492