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Friday, November 15, 2024

Steven Skiena's team wins KDD Test of Time Award for graph representation learning

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Wendy Pearson Vice President for Strategic Initiatives | Stony Brook University

Wendy Pearson Vice President for Strategic Initiatives | Stony Brook University

Department of Computer Science Professor Steven Skiena, along with his former students Rami al-Rfou and Bryan Perozzi, received the 2024 KDD Test of Time Award for their work on graph representation learning.

The KDD Test of Time Award highlights the long-term value of pioneering research, acknowledging that some papers gain prominence and influence over time. Presented by the Association for Computing Machinery Special Interest Group on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (ACM SIGKDD), it recognizes a paper that has made a lasting and influential impact on data mining and knowledge discovery.

The team received the award at the KDD Conference in Barcelona, Spain.

Skiena and his team were recognized for their 2014 paper, “Deepwalk: online learning of social representations.” Deepwalk is a way to turn large graphs, like social networks or product-consumer purchase data, into a representation that machine learning models can easily understand. The team’s paper was the first in a long line of research developments leading to graph neural networks, now used widely in applications like YouTube video recommendations or friend suggestions on Facebook and Instagram.

“Data mining and knowledge discovery are essential for turning vast amounts of data into meaningful insights that can drive real-world progress,” said Samir Das, professor and chair of the Department of Computer Science. “This award is a testament to Skiena, al-Rfou, and Perozzi’s groundbreaking work and its lasting impact on the field. It’s exciting to see their contributions recognized in such a significant way.”

“It was very gratifying to have the importance of our work be recognized by the community,” said Skiena, a distinguished teaching professor who is also director of the Institute for AI-driven Discovery and Innovation. “It was great to get together again with my two PhD students, Rami and Bryan, as we all received the award. Rami and Bryan have gone on to become very prominent industrial researchers in their own rights — at OpenAI and Google respectively — and I am very proud of all they have done.”

Read more on the Department of Computer Science website.

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