Relational Learning with Gated and Attentive Neighbor Aggregator for Few-Shot Knowledge Graph Completion
Aiming at expanding few-shot relations' coverage in knowledge graphs (KGs), few-shot knowledge graph completion (FKGC) has recently gained more research interests. Some existing models employ a few-shot relation's multi-hop neighbor information to enhance its semantic representation. Howev...
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Zusammenfassung: | Aiming at expanding few-shot relations' coverage in knowledge graphs (KGs),
few-shot knowledge graph completion (FKGC) has recently gained more research
interests. Some existing models employ a few-shot relation's multi-hop neighbor
information to enhance its semantic representation. However, noise neighbor
information might be amplified when the neighborhood is excessively sparse and
no neighbor is available to represent the few-shot relation. Moreover, modeling
and inferring complex relations of one-to-many (1-N), many-to-one (N-1), and
many-to-many (N-N) by previous knowledge graph completion approaches requires
high model complexity and a large amount of training instances. Thus, inferring
complex relations in the few-shot scenario is difficult for FKGC models due to
limited training instances. In this paper, we propose a few-shot relational
learning with global-local framework to address the above issues. At the global
stage, a novel gated and attentive neighbor aggregator is built for accurately
integrating the semantics of a few-shot relation's neighborhood, which helps
filtering the noise neighbors even if a KG contains extremely sparse
neighborhoods. For the local stage, a meta-learning based TransH (MTransH)
method is designed to model complex relations and train our model in a few-shot
learning fashion. Extensive experiments show that our model outperforms the
state-of-the-art FKGC approaches on the frequently-used benchmark datasets
NELL-One and Wiki-One. Compared with the strong baseline model MetaR, our model
achieves 5-shot FKGC performance improvements of 8.0% on NELL-One and 2.8% on
Wiki-One by the metric Hits@10. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2104.13095 |