Department of Informatics – DDIS

Dynamic and Distributed Information Systems Group

New Article by Baumgartner et al. at the Journal of Web Semantics

9. August 2022 | cristina_sarasua | Keine Kommentare |

Congratulations to our colleagues Matthias Baumgartner, former DDIS PostDoc Daniele Dell’Aglio, Heiko Paulheim (University of Mannheim), and Abraham Bernstein on their new journal article “Towards the Web of Embeddings: Integrating multiple knowledge graph embedding spaces with FedCoder” at the Journal of Web Semantics!

Abstract: The Semantic Web is distributed yet interoperable: Distributed since resources are created and published by a variety of producers, tailored to their specific needs and knowledge; Interoperable as entities are linked across resources, allowing to use resources from different providers in concord. Complementary to the explicit usage of Semantic Web resources, embedding methods made them applicable to machine learning tasks. Subsequently, embedding models for numerous tasks and structures have been developed, and embedding spaces for various resources have been published. The ecosystem of embedding spaces is distributed but not interoperable: Entity embeddings are not readily comparable across different spaces. To parallel the Web of Data with a Web of Embeddings, we must thus integrate available embedding spaces into a uniform space.

Current integration approaches are limited to two spaces and presume that both of them were embedded with the same method — both assumptions are unlikely to hold in the context of a Web of Embeddings. In this paper, we present FedCoder— an approach that integrates multiple embedding spaces via a latent space. We assert that linked entities have a similar representation in the latent space so that entities become comparable across embedding spaces. FedCoder employs an autoencoder to learn this latent space from linked as well as non-linked entities.

Our experiments show that FedCoder substantially outperforms state-of-the-art approaches when faced with different embedding models, that it scales better than previous methods in the number of embedding spaces, and that it improves with more graphs being integrated whilst performing comparably with current approaches that assumed joint learning of the embeddings and were, usually, limited to two sources. Our results demonstrate that FedCoder is well adapted to integrate the distributed, diverse, and large ecosystem of embeddings spaces into an interoperable Web of Embeddings.

You can read the full article here.


Abgelegt unter: DDIS-PeopleLarge-scale graph processingPublicationsSemantic Web