Knowledge Bases
Block seminar, 7 ECTS credits, winter semester 2017–18
Basic Information
- Type: Block seminar
- Lecturer: Simon Razniewski, Paramita Mirza
- Credits: 7 ECTS credits
- Registration: Course is full, unfortunately no further registrations can be accepted
- Dates: November 16 & 23, 2017 (introductory meetings) and March 6 & 7, 2018 (block seminar).
The seminar is a block seminar and will take place on two (consecutive) days at the end of February or beginning of March--the exact days to be agreed with the participants. There will also be two meetings at the beginning of the semester, for which participation is mandatory.
News
- November 16, 2017 -- Slides for the kick-off meeting are available [pdf]
- November 16, 2017 -- Please fill in the Doodle for the block seminar days
- November 20, 2017 -- Template for seminar paper available [zip]
- November 22, 2017 -- Based on the Doodle, the block seminar dates have been fixed to March 6 and 7
- November 23, 2017 -- Slides from the second meeting are online [pdf]
- December 6, 2017 -- Tentative block seminar schedule is online (see below)
Topics
A detailed list is below
Representation, collection and extraction of general knowledge in knowledge bases (KBs) is at the core of many AI applications. In this seminar, we cover a range of topics around KBs, in particular factual KBs (e.g., Wikidata, YAGO, DBPedia), common-sense KBs (e.g., science knowledge, howto-knowledge, script knowledge) and non-textual KBs (e.g., ImageNet). We explore how these KBs are constructed and how they are used in various applications such as question answering (QA), story/script prediction and biography generation. We also explore learning new facts over KBs.
Schedule
- October 4, 2017 -- Registration deadline
- November 16, 2017 -- Kick-off meeting (participation is mandatory) [pdf]
- Time: 11:30 am - 13:00 am
- Place: Room 23, MPI-Inf building (E 1.4, ground level)
- Explanation of the structure and organization of the seminar
- Brief introduction to knowledge bases
- Presentation of the topics
- November 23, 2017 -- "How to prepare and present a seminar talk" (participation is mandatory)
- Time: 11:30 am - 13:00 am
- Place: Room 23, MPI-Inf building (E 1.4, ground level)
- As this is a block seminar, it is particularly crucial that the students' presentations are of high quality. This lecture aims at preparing the participants in such a way that their slides and presentations will be of high quality.
- Topic assignment: students prepare a preferred ranked list of proposed topics, we will do the live assignment based on a randomly decided order.
- December 13, 2017, 23:59 -- students send a suggestion of the outline of their seminar paper, including an itemization of the planned content for each section.
- January 31, 2018, 23:59 -- students submit their final seminar paper.
- February 20, 2018, 23:59 -- students send preliminary slides
- March 3, 2018, 23:59 -- students send their final slides which they will use in the block seminar
- March 6, 2018 -- Block seminar, Day 1 - Room 433, MPI-Inf building (E 1.4, 4th floor)
- March 7, 2018 -- Block seminar, Day 2 - Room 433, MPI-Inf building (E 1.4, 4th floor)
Tentative Seminar Schedule
Format: 25 minutes presentation, 10 minutes discussion
March 6:
10:00-10:35 1: Collaborative KBs: Wikidata (Safura Isayeva)
10:35-11:10 2: Structured information extraction: DBpedia and YAGO (Mang Zhao)
10 minutes break
11:20-11:55 3: KB population in the TAC 2016 challenge (Nitisha Jain)
11:55-12:30 4: General common-sense KBs: ConceptNet and WebChild (Xueting Li)
1 hour lunch break
13:30-14:05 5: Domain-specific activity KBs (Anu Goel)
14:05-14:40 6: The Allen AI science challenge & building a science KB: Aristo (Frederick Schmitt)
10 minutes break
14:50-15:25 7: KB association rule mining (Joscha Cüppers)
March 7:
10:00-10:35 8: Enriching KBs with named events: EVIN (Harshita Jhavar)
10:35-11:10 9: Exploring and profiling KBs (Adrian Spirescu)
10 minutes break
11:20-11:55 10: KB question answering (Shrestha Ghosh)
11:55-12:30 11: Hybrid question answering using KBs and text (Aydan Rende)
1 hour lunch break
13:30-14:05 12: Non-encyclopedic QA in the science domain (Khansa Rekik)
14:05-14:40 13: Biography generation (David Neisens)
5 minutes break
14:45-15:00 Closing remarks
Rules and Grading
- Participation in the kick-off meeting, the "How to prepare and present a seminar talk" lecture, and both days of the block seminar is mandatory.
- Students will be assigned a particular topic and have to submit a seminar paper (template will be provided) and give a presentation (25 minutes + 10 minutes for discussion) over the topic.
- Grading will be based on:
- the report
- the presentation
- knowledge on the subject (as evidenced in the discussion after the presentation)
- activity in the discussions
- ability to stick to deadlines
- Attention: According to the study regulations, you are only allowed to withdraw from the seminar within three weeks after the kick-off meeting, i.e., until December 7. Later withdrawal counts as "failed".
Topics
Area I: Knowledge Bases
- 1: Collaborative KBs: Wikidata -- Safura Isayeva (Simon)
- 2: Structured information extraction: DBpedia and YAGO -- Mang Zhao (Simon)
- 3: KB population in the TAC 2016 challenge -- Nitisha Jain (Paramita)
- TAC Challenge [link]
- 4: General common-sense KB: ConceptNet and WebChild -- Xueting Li (Paramita)
- 5: Domain-specific activity KBs -- Anu Goel (Paramita)
- 6: The Allen AI science challenge & building a science KB: Aristo -- Frederik Schmitt (Paramita)
Area II: Learning over Knowledge Bases
- 7: KB association rule mining -- Joscha Cüppers (Simon)
- Fast rule mining in ontological knowledge bases with AMIE+ (Galárraga et al., VLDB 2015) [pdf]
- 8: Enriching KBs with Named Events: EVIN -- Harshita Jhavar (Paramita)
- A Fresh Look on Knowledge Bases: Distilling Named Events from News (Kuzey et al., CIKM 2014) [pdf]
Area III: Using Knowledge Bases
- 9: Exploring and profiling KBs -- Adrian Spirescu (Simon)
- 10: KB question answering -- Shrestha Ghosh (Simon)
- 11: Hybrid question answering using KBs and text -- Aydan Rende (Paramita)
- 12: Non-encyclopedic QA in the science domain (continuation of Topic 5) -- Khansa Rekik (Simon)
- Answering complex questions using open information extraction (Khot et al., ACL 2017) [pdf]
- 13: Biography generation - David Neisens (Simon)
- Learning to generate one-sentence biographies from Wikidata (Chisholm et al., EACL 2017 [pdf]