Nigel P. Duffy

2papers

2 Papers

SYSep 28, 2021
DeepPSL: End-to-end perception and reasoning

Sridhar Dasaratha, Sai Akhil Puranam, Karmvir Singh Phogat et al.

We introduce DeepPSL a variant of probabilistic soft logic (PSL) to produce an end-to-end trainable system that integrates reasoning and perception. PSL represents first-order logic in terms of a convex graphical model -- hinge-loss Markov random fields (HL-MRFs). PSL stands out among probabilistic logic frameworks due to its tractability having been applied to systems of more than 1 billion ground rules. The key to our approach is to represent predicates in first-order logic using deep neural networks and then to approximately back-propagate through the HL-MRF and thus train every aspect of the first-order system being represented. We believe that this approach represents an interesting direction for the integration of deep learning and reasoning techniques with applications to knowledge base learning, multi-task learning, and explainability. Evaluation on three different tasks demonstrates that DeepPSL significantly outperforms state-of-the-art neuro-symbolic methods on scalability while achieving comparable or better accuracy.

CLMar 10, 2021
DeepCPCFG: Deep Learning and Context Free Grammars for End-to-End Information Extraction

Freddy C. Chua, Nigel P. Duffy

We address the challenge of extracting structured information from business documents without detailed annotations. We propose Deep Conditional Probabilistic Context Free Grammars (DeepCPCFG) to parse two-dimensional complex documents and use Recursive Neural Networks to create an end-to-end system for finding the most probable parse that represents the structured information to be extracted. This system is trained end-to-end with scanned documents as input and only relational-records as labels. The relational-records are extracted from existing databases avoiding the cost of annotating documents by hand. We apply this approach to extract information from scanned invoices achieving state-of-the-art results despite using no hand-annotations.