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AE SemRL: Learning Semantic Association Rules with Autoencoders

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Association Rule Mining (ARM) is the task of learning associations among data features in the form of logical rules. Mining association rules from high-dimensional numerical data, for example, time series data from a large number of sensors in a smart environment, is a computationally intensive task. In this study, we propose an Autoencoder-based approach to learn and extract association rules from time series data (AE SemRL). Moreover, we argue that in the presence of semantic information related to time series data sources, semantics can facilitate learning generalizable and explainable association rules. Despite enriching time series data with additional semantic features, AE SemRL makes learning association rules from high-dimensional data feasible. Our experiments show that semantic association rules can be extracted from a latent representation created by an Autoencoder and this method has in the order of hundreds of times faster execution time than state-of-the-art ARM approaches in many scenarios. We believe that this study advances a new way of extracting associations from representations and has the potential to inspire more research in this field.


K-Act2Emo: Korean Commonsense Knowledge Graph for Indirect Emotional Expression

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In many literary texts, emotions are indirectly conveyed through descriptions of actions, facial expressions, and appearances, necessitating emotion inference for narrative understanding. In this paper, we introduce K-Act2Emo, a Korean commonsense knowledge graph (CSKG) comprising 1,900 indirect emotional expressions and the emotions inferable from them. We categorize reasoning types into inferences in positive situations, inferences in negative situations, and inferences when expressions do not serve as emotional cues. Unlike existing CSKGs, K-Act2Emo specializes in emotional contexts, and experimental results validate its effectiveness for training emotion inference models. Significantly, the BART-based knowledge model fine-tuned with K-Act2Emo outperforms Figure 1: Illustration of inferential knowledge in K-various existing Korean large language Act2Emo: PosEnv for inferences in positive situations, models, achieving performance levels comparable NegEnv for negative situations, and NonEmo when expressions to GPT-4 Turbo.


Towards Knowledge-Grounded Natural Language Understanding and Generation

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

This thesis investigates how natural language understanding and generation with transformer models can benefit from grounding the models with knowledge representations. Currently, the most prevailing paradigm for training language models is through pre-training on abundant raw text data and fine-tuning on downstream tasks. Although language models continue to advance, especially the recent trend of Large Language Models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT, there seem to be limits to what can be achieved with text data alone and it is desirable to study the impact of applying and integrating rich forms of knowledge representation to improve model performance. The most widely used form of knowledge for language modelling is structured knowledge in the form of triples consisting of entities and their relationships, often in English. This thesis explores beyond this conventional approach and aims to address several key questions: Can knowledge of entities extend its benefits beyond entity-centric tasks such as entity linking? How can we faithfully and effectively extract such structured knowledge from raw text, especially noisy web text? How do other types of knowledge, beyond structured knowledge, contribute to improving NLP tasks?


Open Knowledge Base Canonicalization with Multi-task Learning

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The construction of large open knowledge bases (OKBs) is integral to many knowledge-driven applications on the world wide web such as web search. However, noun phrases and relational phrases in OKBs often suffer from redundancy and ambiguity, which calls for the investigation on OKB canonicalization. Current solutions address OKB canonicalization by devising advanced clustering algorithms and using knowledge graph embedding (KGE) to further facilitate the canonicalization process. Nevertheless, these works fail to fully exploit the synergy between clustering and KGE learning, and the methods designed for these subtasks are sub-optimal. To this end, we put forward a multi-task learning framework, namely MulCanon, to tackle OKB canonicalization. In addition, diffusion model is used in the soft clustering process to improve the noun phrase representations with neighboring information, which can lead to more accurate representations. MulCanon unifies the learning objectives of these sub-tasks, and adopts a two-stage multi-task learning paradigm for training. A thorough experimental study on popular OKB canonicalization benchmarks validates that MulCanon can achieve competitive canonicalization results.


Causal knowledge engineering: A case study from COVID-19

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

COVID-19 appeared abruptly in early 2020, requiring a rapid response amid a context of great uncertainty. Good quality data and knowledge was initially lacking, and many early models had to be developed with causal assumptions and estimations built in to supplement limited data, often with no reliable approach for identifying, validating and documenting these causal assumptions. Our team embarked on a knowledge engineering process to develop a causal knowledge base consisting of several causal BNs for diverse aspects of COVID-19. The unique challenges of the setting lead to experiments with the elicitation approach, and what emerged was a knowledge engineering method we call Causal Knowledge Engineering (CKE). The CKE provides a structured approach for building a causal knowledge base that can support the development of a variety of application-specific models. Here we describe the CKE method, and use our COVID-19 work as a case study to provide a detailed discussion and analysis of the method.


Learning to better see the unseen: Broad-Deep Mixed Anti-Forgetting Framework for Incremental Zero-Shot Fault Diagnosis

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Zero-shot fault diagnosis (ZSFD) is capable of identifying unseen faults via predicting fault attributes labeled by human experts. We first recognize the demand of ZSFD to deal with continuous changes in industrial processes, i.e., the model's ability to adapt to new fault categories and attributes while avoiding forgetting the diagnosis ability learned previously. To overcome the issue that the existing ZSFD paradigm cannot learn from evolving streams of training data in industrial scenarios, the incremental ZSFD (IZSFD) paradigm is proposed for the first time, which incorporates category increment and attribute increment for both traditional ZSFD and generalized ZSFD paradigms. To achieve IZSFD, we present a broad-deep mixed anti-forgetting framework (BDMAFF) that aims to learn from new fault categories and attributes. To tackle the issue of forgetting, BDMAFF effectively accumulates previously acquired knowledge from two perspectives: features and attribute prototypes. The feature memory is established through a deep generative model that employs anti-forgetting training strategies, ensuring the generation quality of historical categories is supervised and maintained. The diagnosis model SEEs the UNSEEN faults with the help of generated samples from the generative model. The attribute prototype memory is established through a diagnosis model inspired by the broad learning system. Unlike traditional incremental learning algorithms, BDMAFF introduces a memory-driven iterative update strategy for the diagnosis model, which allows the model to learn new faults and attributes without requiring the storage of all historical training samples. The effectiveness of the proposed method is verified by a real hydraulic system and the Tennessee-Eastman benchmark process.


Advice Refinement in Knowledge-Based SVMs

Neural Information Processing Systems

Knowledge-based support vector machines (KBSVMs) incorporate advice from domain experts, which can improve generalization significantly. A major limitation that has not been fully addressed occurs when the expert advice is imperfect, which can lead to poorer models. We propose a model that extends KBSVMs and is able to not only learn from data and advice, but also simultaneously improves the advice. The proposed approach is particularly effective for knowledge discovery in domains with few labeled examples. The proposed model contains bilinear constraints, and is solved using two iterative approaches: successive linear programming and a constrained concave-convex approach. Experimental results demonstrate that these algorithms yield useful refinements to expert advice, as well as improve the performance of the learning algorithm overall.


Open Continual Feature Selection via Granular-Ball Knowledge Transfer

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

This paper presents a novel framework for continual feature selection (CFS) in data preprocessing, particularly in the context of an open and dynamic environment where unknown classes may emerge. CFS encounters two primary challenges: the discovery of unknown knowledge and the transfer of known knowledge. To this end, the proposed CFS method combines the strengths of continual learning (CL) with granular-ball computing (GBC), which focuses on constructing a granular-ball knowledge base to detect unknown classes and facilitate the transfer of previously learned knowledge for further feature selection. CFS consists of two stages: initial learning and open learning. The former aims to establish an initial knowledge base through multi-granularity representation using granular-balls. The latter utilizes prior granular-ball knowledge to identify unknowns, updates the knowledge base for granular-ball knowledge transfer, reinforces old knowledge, and integrates new knowledge. Subsequently, we devise an optimal feature subset mechanism that incorporates minimal new features into the existing optimal subset, often yielding superior results during each period. Extensive experimental results on public benchmark datasets demonstrate our method's superiority in terms of both effectiveness and efficiency compared to state-of-the-art feature selection methods.


KIF: A Framework for Virtual Integration of Heterogeneous Knowledge Bases using Wikidata

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

We present a knowledge integration framework (called KIF) that uses Wikidata as a lingua franca to integrate heterogeneous knowledge bases. These can be triplestores, relational databases, CSV files, etc., which may or may not use the Wikidata dialect of RDF. KIF leverages Wikidata's data model and vocabulary plus user-defined mappings to expose a unified view of the integrated bases while keeping track of the context and provenance of their statements. The result is a virtual knowledge base which behaves like an "extended Wikidata" and which can be queried either through an efficient filter interface or using SPARQL. We present the design and implementation of KIF, discuss how we have used it to solve a real integration problem in the domain of chemistry (involving Wikidata, PubChem, and IBM CIRCA), and present experimental results on the performance and overhead of KIF.


Reasoning With Neural Tensor Networks for Knowledge Base Completion Computer Science Department, Stanford University, Stanford, CA94305, USA

Neural Information Processing Systems

Knowledge bases are an important resource for question answering and other tasks but often suffer from incompleteness and lack of ability to reason over their discrete entities and relationships. In this paper we introduce an expressive neural tensor network suitable for reasoning over relationships between two entities. Previous work represented entities as either discrete atomic units or with a single entity vector representation. We show that performance can be improved when entities are represented as an average of their constituting word vectors. This allows sharing of statistical strength between, for instance, facts involving the "Sumatran tiger" and "Bengal tiger." Lastly, we demonstrate that all models improve when these word vectors are initialized with vectors learned from unsupervised large corpora. We assess the model by considering the problem of predicting additional true relations between entities given a subset of the knowledge base. Our model outperforms previous models and can classify unseen relationships in WordNet and FreeBase with an accuracy of 86.2% and 90.0%, respectively.