DELE: Deductive $\mathcal{EL}^{++}$ Embeddings for Knowledge Base Completion
This work addresses limitations in ontology embedding for knowledge base completion, offering incremental improvements for researchers in semantic web and AI.
The paper tackled the problem of knowledge base completion for ontologies in Description Logic EL++ by developing embedding methods that incorporate deductive closure to distinguish between unprovable and provably false statements, resulting in improved performance over baseline methods.
Ontology embeddings map classes, roles, and individuals in ontologies into $\mathbb{R}^n$, and within $\mathbb{R}^n$ similarity between entities can be computed or new axioms inferred. For ontologies in the Description Logic $\mathcal{EL}^{++}$, several optimization-based embedding methods have been developed that explicitly generate models of an ontology. However, these methods suffer from some limitations; they do not distinguish between statements that are unprovable and provably false, and therefore they may use entailed statements as negatives. Furthermore, they do not utilize the deductive closure of an ontology to identify statements that are inferred but not asserted. We evaluated a set of embedding methods for $\mathcal{EL}^{++}$ ontologies, incorporating several modifications that aim to make use of the ontology deductive closure. In particular, we designed novel negative losses that account both for the deductive closure and different types of negatives and formulated evaluation methods for knowledge base completion. We demonstrate that our embedding methods improve over the baseline ontology embedding in the task of knowledge base or ontology completion.