LGSep 11, 2025

Composable Score-based Graph Diffusion Model for Multi-Conditional Molecular Generation

arXiv:2509.09451v21 citationsh-index: 46
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for flexible, multi-property molecular design in drug and material discovery, representing a strong specific gain rather than a foundational advance.

The paper tackled the problem of generating molecules with multiple property constraints by proposing a score-based graph diffusion model, achieving a 15.3% average improvement in controllability over prior methods while maintaining high validity and fidelity.

Controllable molecular graph generation is essential for material and drug discovery, where generated molecules must satisfy diverse property constraints. While recent advances in graph diffusion models have improved generation quality, their effectiveness in multi-conditional settings remains limited due to reliance on joint conditioning or continuous relaxations that compromise fidelity. To address these limitations, we propose Composable Score-based Graph Diffusion model (CSGD), the first model that extends score matching to discrete graphs via concrete scores, enabling flexible and principled manipulation of conditional guidance. Building on this foundation, we introduce two score-based techniques: Composable Guidance (CoG), which allows fine-grained control over arbitrary subsets of conditions during sampling, and Probability Calibration (PC), which adjusts estimated transition probabilities to mitigate train-test mismatches. Empirical results on four molecular datasets show that CSGD achieves state-of-the-art performance, with a 15.3% average improvement in controllability over prior methods, while maintaining high validity and distributional fidelity. Our findings highlight the practical advantages of score-based modeling for discrete graph generation and its capacity for flexible, multi-property molecular design.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes