LGAug 18, 2021

Computing Steiner Trees using Graph Neural Networks

arXiv:2108.08368v17 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses NP-complete combinatorial optimization problems for researchers in machine learning and graph algorithms, but it is incremental as it builds on existing GNN methods for similar problems.

The paper tackled the Steiner Tree Problem by applying graph neural networks and other learning frameworks to compute low-cost Steiner trees, finding that while out-of-the-box GNN methods performed worse than the classic 2-approximation, combining them with a greedy shortest path construction slightly outperformed it.

Graph neural networks have been successful in many learning problems and real-world applications. A recent line of research explores the power of graph neural networks to solve combinatorial and graph algorithmic problems such as subgraph isomorphism, detecting cliques, and the traveling salesman problem. However, many NP-complete problems are as of yet unexplored using this method. In this paper, we tackle the Steiner Tree Problem. We employ four learning frameworks to compute low cost Steiner trees: feed-forward neural networks, graph neural networks, graph convolutional networks, and a graph attention model. We use these frameworks in two fundamentally different ways: 1) to train the models to learn the actual Steiner tree nodes, 2) to train the model to learn good Steiner point candidates to be connected to the constructed tree using a shortest path in a greedy fashion. We illustrate the robustness of our heuristics on several random graph generation models as well as the SteinLib data library. Our finding suggests that the out-of-the-box application of GNN methods does worse than the classic 2-approximation method. However, when combined with a greedy shortest path construction, it even does slightly better than the 2-approximation algorithm. This result sheds light on the fundamental capabilities and limitations of graph learning techniques on classical NP-complete problems.

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