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The computational tractability of Integrated Information Theory (IIT) is fundamentally constrained by the exponential cost of identifying the Minimum Information Partition (MIP), which is required to quantify integrated information (Φ). Existing approaches become impractical beyond ~15–20 variables, limiting IIT analyses on realistic neural and complex systems. We introduce GeoMIP, a geometric–topological framework that recasts the MIP search as a graph-based optimization problem on the n-dimensional hypercube graph: discrete system states are modeled as graph vertices, and Hamming distance adjacency defines edges and shortest-path structures. Building on a tensor-decomposed representation of the transition probabilities, GeoMIP constructs a transition-cost (ground cost) structure by dynamic programming over graph neighborhoods and BFS-like exploration by Hamming levels, exploiting hypercube symmetries to reduce redundant evaluations. We validate GeoMIP against PyPhi, ensuring reliability of MIP identification and Φ computation. Across multiple implementations, GeoMIP achieves 165–326× speedups over PyPhi while maintaining 98–100% agreement in partition identification. Heuristic extensions further enable analyses up to ~25 variables, substantially expanding the practical IIT regime. Overall, by leveraging the hypercube’s explicit graph structure (vertices, edges, shortest paths, and automorphisms), GeoMIP turns an intractable combinatorial search into a scalable graph-based procedure for IIT partitioning.
Díaz-Arancibia et al. (Tue,) studied this question.