Semi-decentralized Inference in Heterogeneous Graph Neural Networks for Traffic Demand Forecasting: An Edge-Computing Approach
Accurate and timely prediction of transportation demand and supply is essential for improving customer experience and raising the provider's profit. Recently, graph neural networks (GNNs) have been shown promising in predicting traffic demand and supply in small city regions. This awes their capability in modeling both a node's historical features and its relational information with other nodes. However, more efficient taxi demand and supply forecasting can still be achieved by following two main routes. First, is extending the scale of the prediction graph to include more regions. Second, is the simultaneous exploitation of multiple node and edge types to better expose and exploit the complex and diverse set of relations in a traffic system. Nevertheless, the applicability of both approaches is challenged by the scalability of system-wide GNN training and inference. An immediate remedy to the scalability challenge is to decentralize the GNN operation. However, decentralizing GNN operation creates excessive node-to-node communication overhead which hinders the potential of this approach. In this paper, we propose a semi-decentralized approach based on the use of multiple, moderately sized, and high-throughout cloudlet communication networks on the edge. This approach combines the best features of the centralized and decentralized settings; it may minimize the inter-cloudlet communication thereby alleviating the communication overhead of the decentralized approach while promoting scalability due to cloudlet-level decentralization. Also, we propose a heterogeneous GNN-LSTM algorithm for improved taxi-level demand and supply forecasting. This approach allows for handling dynamic taxi graphs where nodes are taxis. Through a set of experiments over real data, we show the advantage of the semi-decentralized approach as tested over our GNN-LSTM algorithm for taxi demand and supply prediction.
READ FULL TEXT