AIJun 24, 2019

Implicitly Learning to Reason in First-Order Logic

arXiv:1906.10106v115 citations
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses a foundational limitation in machine learning for relational knowledge representation, enabling reasoning in first-order logic beyond propositional constraints.

The paper tackles the problem of robustly learning to reason in first-order logic with infinite domains, presenting a new theoretical approach that generalizes implicit learnability to compute queries against learned background knowledge.

We consider the problem of answering queries about formulas of first-order logic based on background knowledge partially represented explicitly as other formulas, and partially represented as examples independently drawn from a fixed probability distribution. PAC semantics, introduced by Valiant, is one rigorous, general proposal for learning to reason in formal languages: although weaker than classical entailment, it allows for a powerful model theoretic framework for answering queries while requiring minimal assumptions about the form of the distribution in question. To date, however, the most significant limitation of that approach, and more generally most machine learning approaches with robustness guarantees, is that the logical language is ultimately essentially propositional, with finitely many atoms. Indeed, the theoretical findings on the learning of relational theories in such generality have been resoundingly negative. This is despite the fact that first-order logic is widely argued to be most appropriate for representing human knowledge. In this work, we present a new theoretical approach to robustly learning to reason in first-order logic, and consider universally quantified clauses over a countably infinite domain. Our results exploit symmetries exhibited by constants in the language, and generalize the notion of implicit learnability to show how queries can be computed against (implicitly) learned first-order background knowledge.

Foundations

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