Closing the Loop: Evaluation, Debate, and Discovery
The most stubborn bottleneck in autonomous knowledge graphs is not retrieval accuracy or latency — it is evaluation. Every edge inserted, every relationship inferred, every hypothesis proposed can be wrong, and the only way to know is to verify. But verification is itself becoming an agentic problem, and the 2026 literature is blunt about it: the evaluator must be as sophisticated as the generator. The question is no longer whether to close the loop but how — and the answer is a layered design that combines a deterministic rule engine, an agent-as-judge, multi-agent debate for contested edges, and autonomous discovery, all gated by a hard abstain-under-uncertainty rule.
This is article #5, the final guardrail in the Autonomous Knowledge Graphs series. It closes the loop over the graph that #1 builds, #2 reasons over, #3 repairs, and #4 remembers. Every design in the series obeys the same engineering constraints: a control plane built on LlamaIndex — DeepSeek as the LLM client, its PropertyGraphIndex for retrieval — with the autonomous loop itself written in plain Python rather than run by a workflow or graph-orchestration engine, over a Cloudflare D1 concept-graph data plane (concepts, concept_edges, lesson_concepts), with a thin TypeScript layer applying every write; DeepSeek-only model egress through one Cloudflare AI Gateway; a grounding-first record on every write — {confidence, reason, source, evidence} with bi-temporal valid_at/recorded_at stamps; and invalidate-not-delete at every irreversible step. The worked example throughout is the AI-engineer curriculum concept graph — concepts linked by prerequisite, builds_on, contrasts_with, part_of, related, and applies_to. Here the loop runs with a ≥ 0.80 commit bar on every edge and grounding-first provenance throughout.
