On inductive abilities of latent factor models for relational learning

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Publication:4611399

DOI10.1613/JAIR.1.11305zbMATH Open1451.68278arXiv1709.05666OpenAlexW2962834633WikidataQ125761043 ScholiaQ125761043MaRDI QIDQ4611399FDOQ4611399


Authors: Théo Trouillon, Éric Gaussier, Christopher R. Dance, G. Bouchard Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 18 January 2019

Published in: Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: Latent factor models are increasingly popular for modeling multi-relational knowledge graphs. By their vectorial nature, it is not only hard to interpret why this class of models works so well, but also to understand where they fail and how they might be improved. We conduct an experimental survey of state-of-the-art models, not towards a purely comparative end, but as a means to get insight about their inductive abilities. To assess the strengths and weaknesses of each model, we create simple tasks that exhibit first, atomic properties of binary relations, and then, common inter-relational inference through synthetic genealogies. Based on these experimental results, we propose new research directions to improve on existing models.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1709.05666




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