Comparative Reasoning for Knowledge Graph Fact Checking

Lihui Liu, Houxiang Ji, Jiejun Xu, Hanghang Tong

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

Abstract

Knowledge graph has been widely used in fact checking, owing to its capability to provide crucial background knowledge to help verify claims. Traditional fact checking works mainly focus on analyzing a single claim but have largely ignored analysis on the semantic consistency of pair-wise claims, despite its key importance in the real-world applications, e.g., multimodal fake news detection. This paper proposes a graph neural network based model INSPECTOR for pair-wise fact checking. Given a pair of claims, INSPECTOR aims to detect the potential semantic inconsistency of the input claims. The main idea of INSPECTOR is to use a graph attention neural network to learn a graph embedding for each claim in the pair, then use a tensor neural network to classify this pair of claims as consistent vs. inconsistent. The experiment results show that our algorithm outperforms state-of-the-art methods, with a higher accuracy and a lower variance.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationProceedings - 2022 IEEE International Conference on Big Data, Big Data 2022
EditorsShusaku Tsumoto, Yukio Ohsawa, Lei Chen, Dirk Van den Poel, Xiaohua Hu, Yoichi Motomura, Takuya Takagi, Lingfei Wu, Ying Xie, Akihiro Abe, Vijay Raghavan
PublisherInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Pages2309-2312
Number of pages4
ISBN (Electronic)9781665480451
DOIs
StatePublished - 2022
Event2022 IEEE International Conference on Big Data, Big Data 2022 - Osaka, Japan
Duration: Dec 17 2022Dec 20 2022

Publication series

NameProceedings - 2022 IEEE International Conference on Big Data, Big Data 2022

Conference

Conference2022 IEEE International Conference on Big Data, Big Data 2022
Country/TerritoryJapan
CityOsaka
Period12/17/2212/20/22

Keywords

  • comparative reasoning
  • fact checking
  • knowledge graph

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Modeling and Simulation
  • Computer Networks and Communications
  • Information Systems
  • Information Systems and Management
  • Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality
  • Control and Optimization

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