Track Seeding and Labelling with Embedded-space Graph Neural Networks

Authors: Nicholas Choma, Daniel Murnane, Xiangyang Ju, Paolo Calafiura, Sean Conlon, Steven Farrell, Prabhat, Giuseppe Cerati, Lindsey Gray, Thomas Klijnsma, Jim Kowalkowski, Panagiotis Spentzouris, Jean-Roch Vlimant, Maria Spiropulu, Adam Aurisano, V Hewes, Aristeidis Tsaris, Kazuhiro Terao, Tracy Usher

arXiv: 2007.00149v1 - DOI (physics.ins-det)
Proceedings submission in Connecting the Dots Workshop 2020, 10 pages

Abstract: To address the unprecedented scale of HL-LHC data, the Exa.TrkX project is investigating a variety of machine learning approaches to particle track reconstruction. The most promising of these solutions, graph neural networks (GNN), process the event as a graph that connects track measurements (detector hits corresponding to nodes) with candidate line segments between the hits (corresponding to edges). Detector information can be associated with nodes and edges, enabling a GNN to propagate the embedded parameters around the graph and predict node-, edge- and graph-level observables. Previously, message-passing GNNs have shown success in predicting doublet likelihood, and we here report updates on the state-of-the-art architectures for this task. In addition, the Exa.TrkX project has investigated innovations in both graph construction, and embedded representations, in an effort to achieve fully learned end-to-end track finding. Hence, we present a suite of extensions to the original model, with encouraging results for hitgraph classification. In addition, we explore increased performance by constructing graphs from learned representations which contain non-linear metric structure, allowing for efficient clustering and neighborhood queries of data points. We demonstrate how this framework fits in with both traditional clustering pipelines, and GNN approaches. The embedded graphs feed into high-accuracy doublet and triplet classifiers, or can be used as an end-to-end track classifier by clustering in an embedded space. A set of post-processing methods improve performance with knowledge of the detector physics. Finally, we present numerical results on the TrackML particle tracking challenge dataset, where our framework shows favorable results in both seeding and track finding.

Submitted to arXiv on 30 Jun. 2020

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