When Modalities Remember: Continual Learning for Multimodal Knowledge Graphs
This addresses the challenge of dynamic multimodal knowledge graphs for AI systems that require continuous adaptation, though it is incremental as it builds on existing multimodal and continual learning methods.
The paper tackles the problem of catastrophic forgetting in multimodal knowledge graphs as they evolve over time, proposing a continual learning model called MRCKG that improves learning of new knowledge while preserving old knowledge, with experiments showing substantial gains on multiple datasets.
Real-world multimodal knowledge graphs (MMKGs) are dynamic, with new entities, relations, and multimodal knowledge emerging over time. Existing continual knowledge graph reasoning (CKGR) methods focus on structural triples and cannot fully exploit multimodal signals from new entities. Existing multimodal knowledge graph reasoning (MMKGR) methods, however, usually assume static graphs and suffer catastrophic forgetting as graphs evolve. To address this gap, we present a systematic study of continual multimodal knowledge graph reasoning (CMMKGR). We construct several continual multimodal knowledge graph benchmarks from existing MMKG datasets and propose MRCKG, a new CMMKGR model. Specifically, MRCKG employs a multimodal-structural collaborative curriculum to schedule progressive learning based on the structural connectivity of new triples to the historical graph and their multimodal compatibility. It also introduces a cross-modal knowledge preservation mechanism to mitigate forgetting through entity representation stability, relational semantic consistency, and modality anchoring. In addition, a multimodal contrastive replay scheme with a two-stage optimization strategy reinforces learned knowledge via multimodal importance sampling and representation alignment. Experiments on multiple datasets show that MRCKG preserves previously learned multimodal knowledge while substantially improving the learning of new knowledge.