Efficient Contrastive Learning for Fast and Accurate Inference on Graphs
Abstract
Graph contrastive learning has made remarkable advances in settings where there is a scarcity of task-specific labels. Despite these advances, the significant computational overhead for representation inference incurred by existing methods that rely on intensive message passing makes them unsuitable for latency-constrained applications. In this paper, we present GraphECL, a simple and efficient contrastive learning method for fast inference on graphs. GraphECL does away with the need for expensive message passing during inference. Specifically, it introduces a novel coupling of the MLP and GNN models, where the former learns to computationally efficiently mimic the computations performed by the latter. We provide a theoretical analysis showing why MLP can capture essential structural information in neighbors well enough to match the performance of GNN in downstream tasks. The extensive experiments on widely used real-world benchmarks that show that GraphECL achieves superior performance and inference efficiency compared to state-of-the-art graph constrastive learning (GCL) methods on homophilous and heterophilous graphs.