Abstract

Abstract Distant supervision relation extraction (DSRE) trains a classifier by automatically labeling data through aligning triples in the knowledge base (KB) with large-scale corpora. Training data generated by distant supervision may contain many mislabeled instances, which is harmful to the training of the classifier. Some recent methods show that relevant background information in KBs, such as entity type (e.g., Organization and Book), can improve the performance of DSRE. However, there are three main problems with these methods. Firstly, these methods are tailored for a specific type of information. A specific type of information only has a positive effect on a part of instances and will not be beneficial to all cases. Secondly, different background information is embedded independently, and no reasonable interaction is achieved. Thirdly, previous methods do not consider the side effect of the introduced noise of background information. To address these issues, we leverage five types of background information instead of a specific type of information in previous works and propose a novel edge-reasoning hybrid graph (ER-HG) model to realize reasonable interaction between different kinds of information. In addition, we further employ an attention mechanism for the ER-HG model to alleviate the side effect of noise. The ER-HG model integrates all types of information efficiently and is very robust to the noise of information. We conduct experiments on two widely used datasets. The experimental results demonstrate that our model outperforms the state-of-the-art methods significantly in held-out metric and robustness tests.

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