Probabilistic Case-based Reasoning for Open-World Knowledge Graph Completion
This addresses the challenge of scalable and interpretable reasoning for knowledge bases, particularly in dynamic environments where new entities are added incrementally.
The paper tackles the problem of open-world knowledge graph completion by proposing a probabilistic case-based reasoning system that predicts entity attributes using reasoning paths from similar entities, achieving performance comparable to state-of-the-art embedding-based methods and significantly outperforming others in online settings.
A case-based reasoning (CBR) system solves a new problem by retrieving `cases' that are similar to the given problem. If such a system can achieve high accuracy, it is appealing owing to its simplicity, interpretability, and scalability. In this paper, we demonstrate that such a system is achievable for reasoning in knowledge-bases (KBs). Our approach predicts attributes for an entity by gathering reasoning paths from similar entities in the KB. Our probabilistic model estimates the likelihood that a path is effective at answering a query about the given entity. The parameters of our model can be efficiently computed using simple path statistics and require no iterative optimization. Our model is non-parametric, growing dynamically as new entities and relations are added to the KB. On several benchmark datasets our approach significantly outperforms other rule learning approaches and performs comparably to state-of-the-art embedding-based approaches. Furthermore, we demonstrate the effectiveness of our model in an "open-world" setting where new entities arrive in an online fashion, significantly outperforming state-of-the-art approaches and nearly matching the best offline method. Code available at https://github.com/ameyagodbole/Prob-CBR