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GRAIL: Graph Edit Distance and Node Alignment Using LLM-Generated Code

Main:7 Pages
12 Figures
Bibliography:4 Pages
8 Tables
Appendix:8 Pages
Abstract

Graph Edit Distance (GED) is a widely used metric for measuring similarity between two graphs. Computing the optimal GED is NP-hard, leading to the development of various neural and non-neural heuristics. While neural methods have achieved improved approximation quality compared to non-neural approaches, they face significant challenges: (1) They require large amounts of ground truth data, which is itself NP-hard to compute. (2) They operate as black boxes, offering limited interpretability. (3) They lack cross-domain generalization, necessitating expensive retraining for each new dataset. We address these limitations with GRAIL, introducing a paradigm shift in this domain. Instead of training a neural model to predict GED, GRAIL employs a novel combination of large language models (LLMs) and automated prompt tuning to generate a program that is used to compute GED. This shift from predicting GED to generating programs imparts various advantages, including end-to-end interpretability and an autonomous self-evolutionary learning mechanism without ground-truth supervision. Extensive experiments on seven datasets confirm that GRAIL not only surpasses state-of-the-art GED approximation methods in prediction quality but also achieves robust cross-domain generalization across diverse graph distributions.

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@article{verma2025_2505.02124,
  title={ GRAIL: Graph Edit Distance and Node Alignment Using LLM-Generated Code },
  author={ Samidha Verma and Arushi Goyal and Ananya Mathur and Ankit Anand and Sayan Ranu },
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2505.02124},
  year={ 2025 }
}
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