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Main Authors: Lhote, Loïck, Markhoff, Béatrice, Soulet, Arnaud
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.08116
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author Lhote, Loïck
Markhoff, Béatrice
Soulet, Arnaud
author_facet Lhote, Loïck
Markhoff, Béatrice
Soulet, Arnaud
contents Large knowledge graphs combine human knowledge garnered from projects ranging from academia and institutions to enterprises and crowdsourcing. Within such graphs, each relationship between two nodes represents a basic fact involving these two entities. The diversity of the semantics of relationships constitutes the richness of knowledge graphs, leading to the emergence of singular topologies, sometimes chaotic in appearance. However, this complex characteristic can be modeled in a simple way by introducing the concept of superficiality, which controls the overlap between relationships whose facts are generated independently. With this model, superficiality also regulates the balance of the global distribution of knowledge by determining the proportion of misdescribed entities. This is the first model for the structure and dynamics of knowledge graphs. It leads to a better understanding of formal knowledge acquisition and organization.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2305_08116
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Structure and Dynamics of Knowledge Graphs, with Superficiality
Lhote, Loïck
Markhoff, Béatrice
Soulet, Arnaud
Artificial Intelligence
Large knowledge graphs combine human knowledge garnered from projects ranging from academia and institutions to enterprises and crowdsourcing. Within such graphs, each relationship between two nodes represents a basic fact involving these two entities. The diversity of the semantics of relationships constitutes the richness of knowledge graphs, leading to the emergence of singular topologies, sometimes chaotic in appearance. However, this complex characteristic can be modeled in a simple way by introducing the concept of superficiality, which controls the overlap between relationships whose facts are generated independently. With this model, superficiality also regulates the balance of the global distribution of knowledge by determining the proportion of misdescribed entities. This is the first model for the structure and dynamics of knowledge graphs. It leads to a better understanding of formal knowledge acquisition and organization.
title The Structure and Dynamics of Knowledge Graphs, with Superficiality
topic Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.08116