Revisiting Robustness in Graph Machine LearningDownload PDF

Published: 01 Feb 2023, Last Modified: 22 Feb 2023ICLR 2023 posterReaders: Everyone
Keywords: graph neural networks, adversarial robustness, label propagation, node-classification, stochastic block models, Bayes classifier, non-i.i.d. data, graph learning, graphs, robustness
TL;DR: GNNs suffer from over-robustness, that is robustness beyond the point of semantic change, which can be combated by including the known label-structure at inference time.
Abstract: Many works show that node-level predictions of Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) are unrobust to small, often termed adversarial, changes to the graph structure. However, because manual inspection of a graph is difficult, it is unclear if the studied perturbations always preserve a core assumption of adversarial examples: that of unchanged semantic content. To address this problem, we introduce a more principled notion of an adversarial graph, which is aware of semantic content change. Using Contextual Stochastic Block Models (CSBMs) and real-world graphs, our results suggest: $i)$ for a majority of nodes the prevalent perturbation models include a large fraction of perturbed graphs violating the unchanged semantics assumption; $ii)$ surprisingly, all assessed GNNs show over-robustness - that is robustness beyond the point of semantic change. We find this to be a complementary phenomenon to adversarial examples and show that including the label-structure of the training graph into the inference process of GNNs significantly reduces over-robustness, while having a positive effect on test accuracy and adversarial robustness. Theoretically, leveraging our new semantics-aware notion of robustness, we prove that there is no robustness-accuracy tradeoff for inductively classifying a newly added node.
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