CLMar 26, 2022Code
Lite Unified Modeling for Discriminative Reading ComprehensionYilin Zhao, Hai Zhao, Libin Shen et al.
As a broad and major category in machine reading comprehension (MRC), the generalized goal of discriminative MRC is answer prediction from the given materials. However, the focuses of various discriminative MRC tasks may be diverse enough: multi-choice MRC requires model to highlight and integrate all potential critical evidence globally; while extractive MRC focuses on higher local boundary preciseness for answer extraction. Among previous works, there lacks a unified design with pertinence for the overall discriminative MRC tasks. To fill in above gap, we propose a lightweight POS-Enhanced Iterative Co-Attention Network (POI-Net) as the first attempt of unified modeling with pertinence, to handle diverse discriminative MRC tasks synchronously. Nearly without introducing more parameters, our lite unified design brings model significant improvement with both encoder and decoder components. The evaluation results on four discriminative MRC benchmarks consistently indicate the general effectiveness and applicability of our model, and the code is available at https://github.com/Yilin1111/poi-net.
CLMar 10, 2022
Look Backward and Forward: Self-Knowledge Distillation with Bidirectional Decoder for Neural Machine TranslationXuanwei Zhang, Libin Shen, Disheng Pan et al.
Neural Machine Translation(NMT) models are usually trained via unidirectional decoder which corresponds to optimizing one-step-ahead prediction. However, this kind of unidirectional decoding framework may incline to focus on local structure rather than global coherence. To alleviate this problem, we propose a novel method, Self-Knowledge Distillation with Bidirectional Decoder for Neural Machine Translation(SBD-NMT). We deploy a backward decoder which can act as an effective regularization method to the forward decoder. By leveraging the backward decoder's information about the longer-term future, distilling knowledge learned in the backward decoder can encourage auto-regressive NMT models to plan ahead. Experiments show that our method is significantly better than the strong Transformer baselines on multiple machine translation data sets.
CLApr 26, 2020Code
MICK: A Meta-Learning Framework for Few-shot Relation Classification with Small Training DataXiaoqing Geng, Xiwen Chen, Kenny Q. Zhu et al.
Few-shot relation classification seeks to classify incoming query instances after meeting only few support instances. This ability is gained by training with large amount of in-domain annotated data. In this paper, we tackle an even harder problem by further limiting the amount of data available at training time. We propose a few-shot learning framework for relation classification, which is particularly powerful when the training data is very small. In this framework, models not only strive to classify query instances, but also seek underlying knowledge about the support instances to obtain better instance representations. The framework also includes a method for aggregating cross-domain knowledge into models by open-source task enrichment. Additionally, we construct a brand new dataset: the TinyRel-CM dataset, a few-shot relation classification dataset in health domain with purposely small training data and challenging relation classes. Experimental results demonstrate that our framework brings performance gains for most underlying classification models, outperforms the state-of-the-art results given small training data, and achieves competitive results with sufficiently large training data.
CLDec 28, 2019
Learning Numeral EmbeddingsChengyue Jiang, Zhonglin Nian, Kaihao Guo et al.
Word embedding is an essential building block for deep learning methods for natural language processing. Although word embedding has been extensively studied over the years, the problem of how to effectively embed numerals, a special subset of words, is still underexplored. Existing word embedding methods do not learn numeral embeddings well because there are an infinite number of numerals and their individual appearances in training corpora are highly scarce. In this paper, we propose two novel numeral embedding methods that can handle the out-of-vocabulary (OOV) problem for numerals. We first induce a finite set of prototype numerals using either a self-organizing map or a Gaussian mixture model. We then represent the embedding of a numeral as a weighted average of the prototype number embeddings. Numeral embeddings represented in this manner can be plugged into existing word embedding learning approaches such as skip-gram for training. We evaluated our methods and showed its effectiveness on four intrinsic and extrinsic tasks: word similarity, embedding numeracy, numeral prediction, and sequence labeling.