Improving Time Sensitivity for Question Answering over Temporal Knowledge Graphs
This work improves question answering for users dealing with temporal data in knowledge graphs, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing temporal KG embeddings with specific enhancements.
The paper tackles the problem of question answering over temporal knowledge graphs by addressing three time-related challenges: unspecified timestamps, subtle lexical differences in time relations, and embeddings that ignore temporal order. The proposed TSQA framework significantly outperforms previous state-of-the-art methods, achieving a 32% absolute error reduction on complex questions requiring multi-step reasoning.
Question answering over temporal knowledge graphs (KGs) efficiently uses facts contained in a temporal KG, which records entity relations and when they occur in time, to answer natural language questions (e.g., "Who was the president of the US before Obama?"). These questions often involve three time-related challenges that previous work fail to adequately address: 1) questions often do not specify exact timestamps of interest (e.g., "Obama" instead of 2000); 2) subtle lexical differences in time relations (e.g., "before" vs "after"); 3) off-the-shelf temporal KG embeddings that previous work builds on ignore the temporal order of timestamps, which is crucial for answering temporal-order related questions. In this paper, we propose a time-sensitive question answering (TSQA) framework to tackle these problems. TSQA features a timestamp estimation module to infer the unwritten timestamp from the question. We also employ a time-sensitive KG encoder to inject ordering information into the temporal KG embeddings that TSQA is based on. With the help of techniques to reduce the search space for potential answers, TSQA significantly outperforms the previous state of the art on a new benchmark for question answering over temporal KGs, especially achieving a 32% (absolute) error reduction on complex questions that require multiple steps of reasoning over facts in the temporal KG.