Note
Click here to download the full example code
Training a GNN for Graph Classification¶
By the end of this tutorial, you will be able to
Load a DGL-provided graph classification dataset.
Understand what readout function does.
Understand how to create and use a minibatch of graphs.
Build a GNN-based graph classification model.
Train and evaluate the model on a DGL-provided dataset.
(Time estimate: 18 minutes)
import dgl
import torch
import torch.nn as nn
import torch.nn.functional as F
Overview of Graph Classification with GNN¶
Graph classification or regression requires a model to predict certain graph-level properties of a single graph given its node and edge features. Molecular property prediction is one particular application.
This tutorial shows how to train a graph classification model for a small dataset from the paper How Powerful Are Graph Neural Networks.
Loading Data¶
import dgl.data
# Generate a synthetic dataset with 10000 graphs, ranging from 10 to 500 nodes.
dataset = dgl.data.GINDataset('PROTEINS', self_loop=True)
The dataset is a set of graphs, each with node features and a single
label. One can see the node feature dimensionality and the number of
possible graph categories of GINDataset
objects in dim_nfeats
and gclasses
attributes.
print('Node feature dimensionality:', dataset.dim_nfeats)
print('Number of graph categories:', dataset.gclasses)
Out:
Node feature dimensionality: 3
Number of graph categories: 2
Defining Data Loader¶
A graph classification dataset usually contains two types of elements: a
set of graphs, and their graph-level labels. Similar to an image
classification task, when the dataset is large enough, we need to train
with mini-batches. When you train a model for image classification or
language modeling, you will use a DataLoader
to iterate over the
dataset. In DGL, you can use the GraphDataLoader
.
You can also use various dataset samplers provided in
torch.utils.data.sampler.
For example, this tutorial creates a training GraphDataLoader
and
test GraphDataLoader
, using SubsetRandomSampler
to tell PyTorch
to sample from only a subset of the dataset.
from dgl.dataloading import GraphDataLoader
from torch.utils.data.sampler import SubsetRandomSampler
num_examples = len(dataset)
num_train = int(num_examples * 0.8)
train_sampler = SubsetRandomSampler(torch.arange(num_train))
test_sampler = SubsetRandomSampler(torch.arange(num_train, num_examples))
train_dataloader = GraphDataLoader(
dataset, sampler=train_sampler, batch_size=5, drop_last=False)
test_dataloader = GraphDataLoader(
dataset, sampler=test_sampler, batch_size=5, drop_last=False)
You can try to iterate over the created GraphDataLoader
and see what it
gives:
Out:
[Graph(num_nodes=186, num_edges=926,
ndata_schemes={'attr': Scheme(shape=(3,), dtype=torch.float64), 'label': Scheme(shape=(), dtype=torch.int64)}
edata_schemes={}), tensor([1, 1, 1, 0, 0])]
As each element in dataset
has a graph and a label, the
GraphDataLoader
will return two objects for each iteration. The
first element is the batched graph, and the second element is simply a
label vector representing the category of each graph in the mini-batch.
Next, we’ll talked about the batched graph.
A Batched Graph in DGL¶
In each mini-batch, the sampled graphs are combined into a single bigger
batched graph via dgl.batch
. The single bigger batched graph merges
all original graphs as separately connected components, with the node
and edge features concatenated. This bigger graph is also a DGLGraph
instance (so you can
still treat it as a normal DGLGraph
object as in
here). It however contains the information
necessary for recovering the original graphs, such as the number of
nodes and edges of each graph element.
batched_graph, labels = batch
print('Number of nodes for each graph element in the batch:', batched_graph.batch_num_nodes())
print('Number of edges for each graph element in the batch:', batched_graph.batch_num_edges())
# Recover the original graph elements from the minibatch
graphs = dgl.unbatch(batched_graph)
print('The original graphs in the minibatch:')
print(graphs)
Out:
Number of nodes for each graph element in the batch: tensor([21, 9, 27, 90, 39])
Number of edges for each graph element in the batch: tensor([107, 39, 141, 464, 175])
The original graphs in the minibatch:
[Graph(num_nodes=21, num_edges=107,
ndata_schemes={'attr': Scheme(shape=(3,), dtype=torch.float64), 'label': Scheme(shape=(), dtype=torch.int64)}
edata_schemes={}), Graph(num_nodes=9, num_edges=39,
ndata_schemes={'attr': Scheme(shape=(3,), dtype=torch.float64), 'label': Scheme(shape=(), dtype=torch.int64)}
edata_schemes={}), Graph(num_nodes=27, num_edges=141,
ndata_schemes={'attr': Scheme(shape=(3,), dtype=torch.float64), 'label': Scheme(shape=(), dtype=torch.int64)}
edata_schemes={}), Graph(num_nodes=90, num_edges=464,
ndata_schemes={'attr': Scheme(shape=(3,), dtype=torch.float64), 'label': Scheme(shape=(), dtype=torch.int64)}
edata_schemes={}), Graph(num_nodes=39, num_edges=175,
ndata_schemes={'attr': Scheme(shape=(3,), dtype=torch.float64), 'label': Scheme(shape=(), dtype=torch.int64)}
edata_schemes={})]
Define Model¶
This tutorial will build a two-layer Graph Convolutional Network (GCN). Each of its layer computes new node representations by aggregating neighbor information. If you have gone through the introduction, you will notice two differences:
Since the task is to predict a single category for the entire graph instead of for every node, you will need to aggregate the representations of all the nodes and potentially the edges to form a graph-level representation. Such process is more commonly referred as a readout. A simple choice is to average the node features of a graph with
dgl.mean_nodes()
.The input graph to the model will be a batched graph yielded by the
GraphDataLoader
. The readout functions provided by DGL can handle batched graphs so that they will return one representation for each minibatch element.
from dgl.nn import GraphConv
class GCN(nn.Module):
def __init__(self, in_feats, h_feats, num_classes):
super(GCN, self).__init__()
self.conv1 = GraphConv(in_feats, h_feats)
self.conv2 = GraphConv(h_feats, num_classes)
def forward(self, g, in_feat):
h = self.conv1(g, in_feat)
h = F.relu(h)
h = self.conv2(g, h)
g.ndata['h'] = h
return dgl.mean_nodes(g, 'h')
Training Loop¶
The training loop iterates over the training set with the
GraphDataLoader
object and computes the gradients, just like
image classification or language modeling.
# Create the model with given dimensions
model = GCN(dataset.dim_nfeats, 16, dataset.gclasses)
optimizer = torch.optim.Adam(model.parameters(), lr=0.01)
for epoch in range(20):
for batched_graph, labels in train_dataloader:
pred = model(batched_graph, batched_graph.ndata['attr'].float())
loss = F.cross_entropy(pred, labels)
optimizer.zero_grad()
loss.backward()
optimizer.step()
num_correct = 0
num_tests = 0
for batched_graph, labels in test_dataloader:
pred = model(batched_graph, batched_graph.ndata['attr'].float())
num_correct += (pred.argmax(1) == labels).sum().item()
num_tests += len(labels)
print('Test accuracy:', num_correct / num_tests)
Out:
Test accuracy: 0.22869955156950672
What’s next¶
See GIN example for an end-to-end graph classification model.
# Thumbnail credits: DGL
# sphinx_gallery_thumbnail_path = '_static/blitz_5_graph_classification.png'
Total running time of the script: ( 0 minutes 22.882 seconds)