Non-adaptive group testing involves grouping arbitrary subsets of items into different pools and identifying defective items based on tests obtained for each pool. Motivated by applications in network tomography, sensor networks and infection propagation we formulate non-adaptive group testing problems on graphs. Unlike conventional group testing problems each group here must conform to the constraints imposed by a graph. For instance, items can be associated with vertices and each pool is any set of nodes that must be path connected. In this paper we associate a test with a random walk. In this context conventional group testing corresponds to the special case of a complete graph on vertices. For interesting classes of graphs we arrive at a rather surprising result, namely, that the number of tests required to identify defective items is substantially similar to that required in conventional group testing problems, where no such constraints on pooling is imposed. Specifically, if corresponds to the mixing time of the graph , we show that with non-adaptive tests, one can identify the defective items. Consequently, for the Erdos-Renyi random graph , as well as expander graphs with constant spectral gap, it follows that non-adaptive tests are sufficient to identify defective items. We next consider a specific scenario that arises in network tomography and show that non-adaptive tests are sufficient to identify defective items. We also consider noisy counterparts of the graph constrained group testing problem and develop parallel results for these cases.
Giovanni De Micheli, Alessandro Tempia Calvino, Gianluca Radi