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Enza Messina

Enza Messina contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Scalable Solution of the Stochastic Multi-path Traveling Salesman Problem via Neural Networks

The multi-path Traveling Salesman Problem with stochastic travel costs arises in hybrid vehicle routing applications designed for Smart City and City Logistics, where multiple paths exist between each pair of locations. Travel times along these paths are typically affected by real-time traffic conditions and therefore modeled as stochastic. The objective of the problem is to determine a Hamiltonian tour that minimizes the expected total travel cost under uncertainty. In this work, we adopt a two-stage stochastic programming formulation. In the first stage, a predefined route specifying the sequence of locations to be visited is determined, while taking into consideration a second-stage recourse problem that selects the optimal path from the feasible set of alternative paths for each pair of locations, once real-time traffic conditions are realized. To reduce the computational burden imposed by the large number of scenarios required to capture travel time uncertainty, the innovation of this work is the integration of neural network-based surrogate models to approximate the expected value of the second-stage recourse problem. Different architectures and training strategies for the neural networks are proposed and analyzed, with performance evaluated in terms of computation time, solution quality, and generalization capability. Preliminary findings demonstrate the enhanced scalability and practical applicability of the approach for complex vehicle routing problems under uncertainty.

preprint2023arXiv

Graph Learning in 4D: a Quaternion-valued Laplacian to Enhance Spectral GCNs

We introduce QuaterGCN, a spectral Graph Convolutional Network (GCN) with quaternion-valued weights at whose core lies the Quaternionic Laplacian, a quaternion-valued Laplacian matrix by whose proposal we generalize two widely-used Laplacian matrices: the classical Laplacian (defined for undirected graphs) and the complex-valued Sign-Magnetic Laplacian (proposed to handle digraphs with weights of arbitrary sign). In addition to its generality, our Quaternionic Laplacian is the only Laplacian to completely preserve the topology of a digraph, as it can handle graphs and digraphs containing antiparallel pairs of edges (digons) of different weights without reducing them to a single (directed or undirected) edge as done with other Laplacians. Experimental results show the superior performance of QuaterGCN compared to other state-of-the-art GCNs, particularly in scenarios where the information the digons carry is crucial to successfully address the task at hand.

preprint2023arXiv

SigMaNet: One Laplacian to Rule Them All

This paper introduces SigMaNet, a generalized Graph Convolutional Network (GCN) capable of handling both undirected and directed graphs with weights not restricted in sign nor magnitude. The cornerstone of SigMaNet is the Sign-Magnetic Laplacian ($L^σ$), a new Laplacian matrix that we introduce ex novo in this work. $L^σ$ allows us to bridge a gap in the current literature by extending the theory of spectral GCNs to (directed) graphs with both positive and negative weights. $L^σ$ exhibits several desirable properties not enjoyed by other Laplacian matrices on which several state-of-the-art architectures are based, among which encoding the edge direction and weight in a clear and natural way that is not negatively affected by the weight magnitude. $L^σ$ is also completely parameter-free, which is not the case of other Laplacian operators such as, e.g., the Magnetic Laplacian. The versatility and the performance of our proposed approach is amply demonstrated via computational experiments. Indeed, our results show that, for at least a metric, SigMaNet achieves the best performance in 15 out of 21 cases and either the first- or second-best performance in 21 cases out of 21, even when compared to architectures that are either more complex or that, due to being designed for a narrower class of graphs, should -- but do not -- achieve a better performance.

preprint2021arXiv

Using Machine Learning to Automate Mammogram Images Analysis

Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-related death after lung cancer in women. Early detection of breast cancer in X-ray mammography is believed to have effectively reduced the mortality rate. However, a relatively high false positive rate and a low specificity in mammography technology still exist. In this work, a computer-aided automatic mammogram analysis system is proposed to process the mammogram images and automatically discriminate them as either normal or cancerous, consisting of three consecutive image processing, feature selection, and image classification stages. In designing the system, the discrete wavelet transforms (Daubechies 2, Daubechies 4, and Biorthogonal 6.8) and the Fourier cosine transform were first used to parse the mammogram images and extract statistical features. Then, an entropy-based feature selection method was implemented to reduce the number of features. Finally, different pattern recognition methods (including the Back-propagation Network, the Linear Discriminant Analysis, and the Naive Bayes Classifier) and a voting classification scheme were employed. The performance of each classification strategy was evaluated for sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy and for general performance using the Receiver Operating Curve. Our method is validated on the dataset from the Eastern Health in Newfoundland and Labrador of Canada. The experimental results demonstrated that the proposed automatic mammogram analysis system could effectively improve the classification performances.