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Numerous papers get published all the time. However, some papers are born to be well-cited while others are not. In this work, we revisit the important problem of citation prediction, by focusing on the important yet realistic prediction on the average number of citations a paper will attract per year. The task is nonetheless challenging because many correlated factors underlie the potential impact of a paper, such as the prestige of its authors, the authority of its publishing venue, and the significance of the problems/techniques/applications it studies. To jointly model these factors, we propose to construct a heterogeneous publication network of nodes including papers, authors, venues, and terms. Moreover, we devise a novel heterogeneous graph neural network (HGN) to jointly embed all types of nodes and links, towards the modeling of research impact and its propagation. Beyond graph heterogeneity, we find it also important to consider the latent research domains, because the same nodes can have different impacts within different communities. Therefore, we further devise a novel cluster-aware (CA) module, which models all nodes and their interactions under the proper contexts of research domains. Finally, to exploit the information-rich texts associated with papers, we devise a novel text-enhancing (TE) module for automatic quality term mining. With the real-world publication data of DBLP, we construct three different networks and conduct comprehensive experiments to evaluate our proposed CATE-HGN framework, against various state-of-the-art models. Rich quantitative results and qualitative case studies demonstrate the superiority of CATE-HGN in citation prediction on publication networks, and indicate its general advantages in various relevant downstream tasks on text-rich heterogeneous networks.
Yang et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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