시작
Kore.ai 대화형 플랫폼
챗봇 개요
자연어 처리(NLP)
봇 개념 및 용어들
빠른 시작 가이드
봇 빌더 접근 방법
사용 고지 사항 (영어)
Kore.ai 봇 빌더로 작업하기
봇 구축 시작하기
릴리스 정보
현재 버전 (영어)
이전 버전 (영어)

개념
디자인
스토리보드
대화 작업
개요
Using the Dialog Builder Tool
노드 유형
사용자 의도 노드
대화 노드
엔티티 노드
양식 노드
확인 노드
서비스 노드
봇 조치 노드
Service Node
WebHook 노드
스크립트 노드
노드 그룹화하기
Agent Transfer Node
사용자 프롬프트
음성 통화 속성
대화 관리
노드 및 전환
구성 요소 전환
컨텍스트 개체
이벤트 기반 봇 조치
지식 그래프
소개
지식 추출
지식 그래프 생성
봇에 지식 그래프 추가
그래프 생성
지식 그래프 작성
FAQ 추가
작업 실행
기존 소스에서 FAQ 구축
특성, 동의어 및 불용어
변수 네임스페이스 관리
수정
용어 편집 및 삭제
용어 편집 및 삭제
질문과 응답 편집
Knowledge Graph Training
지식 그래프 분석
봇 온톨로지 가져오기 및 내보내기
지식 그래프 가져오기
지식 그래프 내보내기
지식 그래프 생성
CSV 파일에서
JSON 파일
지식 그래프 생성
경고 작업
스몰 토크
Digital Skills
디지털 양식
Views
Digital Views
Panels
Widgets
기차
봇 성능 향상 – NLP 최적화
기계 학습
소개
모델 검증
기초 의미
지식 그래프 학습
특성
순위 및 해결
고급 NLP 설정
NLP 설정 및 지침
봇 인텔리전스
소개
컨텍스트 관리
컨텍스트 관리
대화 관리
다중 – 의도 탐지
엔티티 수정
기본 대화
정서 관리
어조 분석
Test & Debug
봇과 대화
발화 테스트
배치 테스트하기
대화 테스트
배포
채널 활성화
봇 게시
분석
봇 분석하기
Conversations Dashboard
Performance Dashboard
사용자 정의 대시보드
소개
맞춤형 메타 태그
사용자 정의 대시보드 생성 방법
Conversation Flows
NLP 지표
Containment Metrics
사용량 지표
스마트 봇
소개
범용 봇
소개
범용 봇 정의
범용 봇 생성
범용 봇 학습
범용 봇 커스터마이징
범용 봇용 추가 언어 활성화
스토어
Manage Assistant
플랜 및 사용량
Overview
Usage Plans
Support Plans
플랜 관리
봇 인증
다국어 봇
개인 식별 정보 삭제하기
봇 변수 사용
IVR 통합
일반 설정
봇 관리

방법
간단한 봇 생성하기
Design Conversation Skills
뱅킹 봇 생성
뱅킹 봇 – 자금 이체
뱅킹 봇 – 잔액 업데이트
Knowledge Graph (KG) 구축
스마트 경고를 예약하는 방법
Design Digital Skills
디지털 양식 설정 방법
디지털 보기 설정 방법
데이터 테이블에 데이터를 추가하는 방법
데이터 테이블 내 데이터 업데이트 방법
UI 양식에서 데이터 테이블에 데이터를 추가하는 방법
Train the Assistant
특성 사용 방법
의도와 엔티티에 대한 패턴 사용 방법
컨텍스트 전환 관리 방법
Deploy the Assistant
상담사 전환을 설정하는 방법
봇 기능 사용 방법
콘텐츠 변수 사용 방법
전역 변수 사용 방법
Kore.ai 웹 SDK 튜토리얼
Kore.ai 위젯 SDK 튜토리얼
Analyze the Assistant
사용자 정의 대시보드 생성 방법
사용자 지정 태그를 사용하여 봇 메트릭을 필터링하는 방법

API 및 SDK
API 참조
Kore.ai API 사용
API 목록
API 컬렉션
koreUtil Libraries
SDK 참조
상담사 전환을 설정하는 방법
봇 기능 사용 방법
콘텐츠 변수 사용 방법
전역 변수 사용 방법
소개
Kore.ai 웹 SDK 튜토리얼
Kore.ai 위젯 SDK 튜토리얼

관리
소개
봇 관리자 콘솔
대시보드
사용자 관리
사용자 관리
그룹 관리
역할 관리
봇 관리 모듈
등록
사용자 초대
사용자 등록을 위한 대량 초대 보내기
사용자 및 사용자 데이터 가져오기
Active Directory에서 사용자 동기화
보안 및 준수
싱글 사인 온 사용
보안 설정
Kore.ai 커넥터
봇 관리자용 분석
Billing (지원하지 않음)
  1. Docs
  2. Virtual Assistants
  3. Builder
  4. Knowledge Graph
  5. Knowledge Graph Terminology

Knowledge Graph Terminology

This article explains the terminology for building a Knowledge Graph within the XO Platform. This terminology applies to both the Few-Shot and the Ontology KG Models unless otherwise specified. Learn more about Knowledge Graph Types.

Terms or Nodes

Terms or Nodes are the building blocks of an ontology and are used to define the fundamental concepts and categories of a Knowledge Graph.

You can organize the terms in a hierarchical order to represent the flow of information in your graph. You can create, organize, edit, and delete terms and set term types to facilitate intent identification 

The Knowledge graph is limited to 20 thousand nodes/terms and 50 thousand FAQs.

Node/Term Hierarchy

For easier representation, we identify node/term hierarchy using the following names:

Root Term/Node

The Root Term/Node forms the topmost term of your Ontology. A Knowledge Graph contains only one root node, and all other nodes in the ontology become its child nodes. The Root node takes the name of the VA by default, but you can change it as needed. In an Ontology-based KG, this node is not used for path qualification or processing. Path qualification starts from first-level nodes. 

For Ontology-Based graphs, it is best to organize your FAQs into a clear structure, so we don’t recommend adding them at the Root node. You can, however, add a maximum of 100 FAQs if required. 

First-level Term/Node

The immediate next-level nodes after the Root node are known as First-Level Term/Node. There can be any number of first-level nodes in a graph. We recommend using first-level nodes to represent high-level terms, such as the names of departments, functionalities, etc. For example, in a Travel Assistant, you might have a first-level node called Reservation, which can be structured by functionality into subnodes such as: Cancel and Update.

Leaf Term/Node

Any node at any level starting with the 2nd is called a Leaf Term/Node.

Note: This hierarchical organization of nodes is for your convenience to keep related questions together. The Knowledge Graph Engine does not consider any parent-child relation while evaluating the questions for a match. The hierarchy does not influence the FAQ matching process since all the nodes are considered the same way, irrespective of their position.

Term/Node Types

Functionally, there are three types of Terms/Nodes.

  • Default: Default terms do not have any particular considerations in shortlisting qualified paths in Ontology-based KGs. 
  • Mandatory: When you mark a term as Mandatory, paths associated with it are shortlisted for ranking only if the user’s utterance includes the mandatory term or its synonyms.
  • Organizer: This term type can be marked as part of the Knowledge Graph to organize the ontology and help qualify FAQs even when they don’t contain the specific terms.

Tags

For each term/node, you can add custom tags. Tags work exactly like terms but are not displayed in the Knowledge Graph ontology to avoid clutter. You can add synonyms and traits to tags as you do to terms.

Synonyms

The Knowledge Graph allows you to add Synonyms for terms to include all possible alternative forms. Adding synonyms reduces the need for training the VA with alternative questions.

For example, the reservation node in our previously-mentioned Travel Assistant may have the following synonyms added to it: booking, order, purchase, etc. 

Synonym Types

When you add a synonym for a term or a tag in the Knowledge Graph, you can add it as a local or global synonym. Local synonyms (or Path Level Synonyms) apply to the term only in that particular path, whereas global synonyms (or Knowledge Graph Synonyms) apply to the term even if it appears on any other path in the ontology.

After v. 7.2 of the XO Platform, you can also use Bot Synonyms inside the Knowledge Graph engine for path qualification and question matching. With this setting, you need not recreate the same synonyms in Bot Synonyms and KG Synonyms.

Traits

A trait is a collection of typical end-user utterances that define the nature of a question. Learn more.

A trait is applied to multiple terms across your Bot Ontology.

Note: Traits also help you filter nodes based on associated user utterances. So, if the user types an utterance that is present in a trait, the assistant only searches the nodes to which the trait is applied. If the utterance is present in any other node to which the trait is not applied, the node is ignored.

Intents

A VA can respond to a given question with an FAQ or the execution of a Dialog Task.

  • FAQ: The question-answer pairs must be added to relevant nodes in your ontology. A maximum of 50k FAQs is permissible. A question is asked differently by different users, and to support this, you must associate multiple alternate forms for each question. Preceding an alternate question with || will allow you to enter patterns for FAQs (after the v.7.2 release).

  • Task: Linking a Dialog task to a KG Intent helps leverage the capabilities of the Knowledge Graph and Dialog tasks to handle FAQs that involve complex conversations.

Notes on the Few-Shot Knowledge Graph

  1. For Few-Shot graphs, you can add all your FAQs to the Root node because the LLM does not require an ontology.
  2. Default terms are not available in Few-Shot Knowledge Graphs. The only exception is when you switch from an Ontology Graph, in which case existing Default terms are stored as such until updated. Afterward, Default terms become Organizer terms and can be set as Mandatory.
  3. Path Level Synonyms are only supported for Mandatory Terms and for Tags.

Knowledge Graph Terminology

This article explains the terminology for building a Knowledge Graph within the XO Platform. This terminology applies to both the Few-Shot and the Ontology KG Models unless otherwise specified. Learn more about Knowledge Graph Types.

Terms or Nodes

Terms or Nodes are the building blocks of an ontology and are used to define the fundamental concepts and categories of a Knowledge Graph.

You can organize the terms in a hierarchical order to represent the flow of information in your graph. You can create, organize, edit, and delete terms and set term types to facilitate intent identification 

The Knowledge graph is limited to 20 thousand nodes/terms and 50 thousand FAQs.

Node/Term Hierarchy

For easier representation, we identify node/term hierarchy using the following names:

Root Term/Node

The Root Term/Node forms the topmost term of your Ontology. A Knowledge Graph contains only one root node, and all other nodes in the ontology become its child nodes. The Root node takes the name of the VA by default, but you can change it as needed. In an Ontology-based KG, this node is not used for path qualification or processing. Path qualification starts from first-level nodes. 

For Ontology-Based graphs, it is best to organize your FAQs into a clear structure, so we don’t recommend adding them at the Root node. You can, however, add a maximum of 100 FAQs if required. 

First-level Term/Node

The immediate next-level nodes after the Root node are known as First-Level Term/Node. There can be any number of first-level nodes in a graph. We recommend using first-level nodes to represent high-level terms, such as the names of departments, functionalities, etc. For example, in a Travel Assistant, you might have a first-level node called Reservation, which can be structured by functionality into subnodes such as: Cancel and Update.

Leaf Term/Node

Any node at any level starting with the 2nd is called a Leaf Term/Node.

Note: This hierarchical organization of nodes is for your convenience to keep related questions together. The Knowledge Graph Engine does not consider any parent-child relation while evaluating the questions for a match. The hierarchy does not influence the FAQ matching process since all the nodes are considered the same way, irrespective of their position.

Term/Node Types

Functionally, there are three types of Terms/Nodes.

  • Default: Default terms do not have any particular considerations in shortlisting qualified paths in Ontology-based KGs. 
  • Mandatory: When you mark a term as Mandatory, paths associated with it are shortlisted for ranking only if the user’s utterance includes the mandatory term or its synonyms.
  • Organizer: This term type can be marked as part of the Knowledge Graph to organize the ontology and help qualify FAQs even when they don’t contain the specific terms.

Tags

For each term/node, you can add custom tags. Tags work exactly like terms but are not displayed in the Knowledge Graph ontology to avoid clutter. You can add synonyms and traits to tags as you do to terms.

Synonyms

The Knowledge Graph allows you to add Synonyms for terms to include all possible alternative forms. Adding synonyms reduces the need for training the VA with alternative questions.

For example, the reservation node in our previously-mentioned Travel Assistant may have the following synonyms added to it: booking, order, purchase, etc. 

Synonym Types

When you add a synonym for a term or a tag in the Knowledge Graph, you can add it as a local or global synonym. Local synonyms (or Path Level Synonyms) apply to the term only in that particular path, whereas global synonyms (or Knowledge Graph Synonyms) apply to the term even if it appears on any other path in the ontology.

After v. 7.2 of the XO Platform, you can also use Bot Synonyms inside the Knowledge Graph engine for path qualification and question matching. With this setting, you need not recreate the same synonyms in Bot Synonyms and KG Synonyms.

Traits

A trait is a collection of typical end-user utterances that define the nature of a question. Learn more.

A trait is applied to multiple terms across your Bot Ontology.

Note: Traits also help you filter nodes based on associated user utterances. So, if the user types an utterance that is present in a trait, the assistant only searches the nodes to which the trait is applied. If the utterance is present in any other node to which the trait is not applied, the node is ignored.

Intents

A VA can respond to a given question with an FAQ or the execution of a Dialog Task.

  • FAQ: The question-answer pairs must be added to relevant nodes in your ontology. A maximum of 50k FAQs is permissible. A question is asked differently by different users, and to support this, you must associate multiple alternate forms for each question. Preceding an alternate question with || will allow you to enter patterns for FAQs (after the v.7.2 release).

  • Task: Linking a Dialog task to a KG Intent helps leverage the capabilities of the Knowledge Graph and Dialog tasks to handle FAQs that involve complex conversations.

Notes on the Few-Shot Knowledge Graph

  1. For Few-Shot graphs, you can add all your FAQs to the Root node because the LLM does not require an ontology.
  2. Default terms are not available in Few-Shot Knowledge Graphs. The only exception is when you switch from an Ontology Graph, in which case existing Default terms are stored as such until updated. Afterward, Default terms become Organizer terms and can be set as Mandatory.
  3. Path Level Synonyms are only supported for Mandatory Terms and for Tags.
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