CLLGAug 4, 2025

Learning to Evolve: Bayesian-Guided Continual Knowledge Graph Embedding

arXiv:2508.02426v13 citationsh-index: 17
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of preserving learned knowledge in evolving knowledge graphs for AI researchers, representing an incremental advance with specific technical contributions.

The paper tackles catastrophic forgetting in continual knowledge graph embedding by proposing BAKE, a model that uses Bayesian posterior updates and continual clustering, achieving significant performance improvements over existing baselines.

Since knowledge graphs (KG) will continue to evolve in real scenarios, traditional KGE models are only suitable for static knowledge graphs. Therefore, continual knowledge graph embedding (CKGE) has attracted the attention of researchers. Currently, a key challenge facing CKGE is that the model is prone to "catastrophic forgetting", resulting in the loss of previously learned knowledge. In order to effectively alleviate this problem, we propose a new CKGE model BAKE. First, we note that the Bayesian posterior update principle provides a natural continual learning strategy that is insensitive to data order and can theoretically effectively resist the forgetting of previous knowledge during data evolution. Different from the existing CKGE method, BAKE regards each batch of new data as a Bayesian update of the model prior. Under this framework, as long as the posterior distribution of the model is maintained, the model can better preserve the knowledge of early snapshots even after evolving through multiple time snapshots. Secondly, we propose a continual clustering method for CKGE, which further directly combats knowledge forgetting by constraining the evolution difference (or change amplitude) between new and old knowledge between different snapshots. We conduct extensive experiments on BAKE on multiple datasets, and the results show that BAKE significantly outperforms existing baseline models.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes