Evaluating approaches for supervised semantic labeling

29 Jan 2018  ·  Natalia Ruemmele, Yuriy Tyshetskiy, Alex Collins ·

Relational data sources are still one of the most popular ways to store enterprise or Web data, however, the issue with relational schema is the lack of a well-defined semantic description. A common ontology provides a way to represent the meaning of a relational schema and can facilitate the integration of heterogeneous data sources within a domain. Semantic labeling is achieved by mapping attributes from the data sources to the classes and properties in the ontology. We formulate this problem as a multi-class classification problem where previously labeled data sources are used to learn rules for labeling new data sources. The majority of existing approaches for semantic labeling have focused on data integration challenges such as naming conflicts and semantic heterogeneity. In addition, machine learning approaches typically have issues around class imbalance, lack of labeled instances and relative importance of attributes. To address these issues, we develop a new machine learning model with engineered features as well as two deep learning models which do not require extensive feature engineering. We evaluate our new approaches with the state-of-the-art.

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