Poster Session 6 · Friday, December 5, 2025 4:30 PM → 7:30 PM
#915
Adaptive Frontier Exploration on Graphs with Applications to Network-Based Disease Testing
Abstract
We study a sequential decision-making problem on a -node graph where each node has an unknown label from a finite set , drawn from a joint distribution that is Markov with respect to . At each step, selecting a node reveals its label and yields a label-dependent reward. The goal is to adaptively choose nodes to maximize expected accumulated discounted rewards. We impose a frontier exploration constraint, where actions are limited to neighbors of previously selected nodes, reflecting practical constraints in settings such as contact tracing and robotic exploration.
We design a Gittins index-based policy that applies to general graphs and is provably optimal when is a forest. Our implementation runs in time while using oracle calls to and space. Experiments on synthetic and real-world graphs show that our method consistently outperforms natural baselines, including in non-tree, budget-limited, and undiscounted settings. For example, in HIV testing simulations on real-world sexual interaction networks, our policy detects nearly all positive cases with only half the population tested, substantially outperforming other baselines.