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Rethinking Contrastive Learning in Graph Anomaly Detection: A Clean-View Perspective

Published: May 23, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2505.18002v1

By: Di Jin , Jingyi Cao , Xiaobao Wang and more

Potential Business Impact:

Finds fake online friends and bad money deals.

Business Areas:
Image Recognition Data and Analytics, Software

Graph anomaly detection aims to identify unusual patterns in graph-based data, with wide applications in fields such as web security and financial fraud detection. Existing methods typically rely on contrastive learning, assuming that a lower similarity between a node and its local subgraph indicates abnormality. However, these approaches overlook a crucial limitation: the presence of interfering edges invalidates this assumption, since it introduces disruptive noise that compromises the contrastive learning process. Consequently, this limitation impairs the ability to effectively learn meaningful representations of normal patterns, leading to suboptimal detection performance. To address this issue, we propose a Clean-View Enhanced Graph Anomaly Detection framework (CVGAD), which includes a multi-scale anomaly awareness module to identify key sources of interference in the contrastive learning process. Moreover, to mitigate bias from the one-step edge removal process, we introduce a novel progressive purification module. This module incrementally refines the graph by iteratively identifying and removing interfering edges, thereby enhancing model performance. Extensive experiments on five benchmark datasets validate the effectiveness of our approach.

Country of Origin
šŸ‡ÆšŸ‡µ šŸ‡ØšŸ‡³ Japan, China

Page Count
9 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Machine Learning (CS)