Abstract

Knowledge graph reasoning or completion aims at inferring missing facts based on existing ones in a knowledge graph. In this work, we focus on the problem of open-world knowledge graph reasoning—a task that reasons about entities which are absent from KG at training time (unseen entities). Unfortunately, the performance of most existing reasoning methods on this problem turns out to be unsatisfactory. Recently, some works use graph convolutional networks to obtain the embeddings of unseen entities for prediction tasks. Graph convolutional networks gather information from the entity’s neighborhood, however, they neglect the unequal natures of neighboring nodes. To resolve this issue, we present an attention-based method named as NAKGR, which leverages neighborhood information to generate entities and relations representations. The proposed model is an encoder-decoder architecture. Specifically, the encoder devises an graph attention mechanism to aggregate neighboring nodes’ information with a weighted combination. The decoder employs an energy function to predict the plausibility for each triplets. Benchmark experiments show that NAKGR achieves significant improvements on the open-world reasoning tasks. In addition, our model also performs well on the closed-world reasoning tasks.

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