Propagation Structure Fusion for Rumor Detection Based on Node-Level Contrastive Learning

IEEE Trans Neural Netw Learn Syst. 2023 Oct 10:PP. doi: 10.1109/TNNLS.2023.3319661. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

With the rise of social media, the rapid spread of rumors online has resulted in numerous negative effects on society and the economy. The methods for rumor detection have attracted great interest from both academia and industry. Given the widespread effectiveness of contrastive learning, many graph contrastive learning models for rumor detection have been proposed by using the event propagation structure as graph data. However, the existing contrastive models usually treat the propagation structure of other events similar to the anchor events as negative samples. While this design choice allows for discriminative learning, on the other hand, it also inevitably pushes apart semantically similar samples and, thus, degrades model performance. In this article, we propose a novel propagation fusion model called propagation structure fusion model based on node-level contrastive learning (PFNC) for rumor detection based on node-level contrastive learning. PFNC first obtains three augmented propagation structures by masking the text of each node in the propagation structure randomly and perturbing some edges in the propagation structure based on the importance of edges. Then, PFNC applies the node-level contrastive learning method between every two augmented propagation structures to prevent the samples with similar propagation structure from far away. Finally, a convolutional neural network (CNN)-based model is proposed to capture the relevant information that is consistent and supplementary among three augmented propagation structures by regarding the propagation structure of the event as a color picture, three augmented propagation structures as color channels, and each node as a pixel. The experimental results on real datasets show that the PFNC significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art models for rumor detection.