CLLGDec 22, 2019

T3: Tree-Autoencoder Constrained Adversarial Text Generation for Targeted Attack

arXiv:1912.10375v21022 citationsHas Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of assessing NLP model robustness for researchers and practitioners, though it is incremental in applying adversarial techniques to text.

The authors tackled the challenge of generating adversarial text that preserves meaning while manipulating NLP models, achieving successful targeted attacks on sentiment analysis and QA tasks with high transferability for black-box attacks.

Adversarial attacks against natural language processing systems, which perform seemingly innocuous modifications to inputs, can induce arbitrary mistakes to the target models. Though raised great concerns, such adversarial attacks can be leveraged to estimate the robustness of NLP models. Compared with the adversarial example generation in continuous data domain (e.g., image), generating adversarial text that preserves the original meaning is challenging since the text space is discrete and non-differentiable. To handle these challenges, we propose a target-controllable adversarial attack framework T3, which is applicable to a range of NLP tasks. In particular, we propose a tree-based autoencoder to embed the discrete text data into a continuous representation space, upon which we optimize the adversarial perturbation. A novel tree-based decoder is then applied to regularize the syntactic correctness of the generated text and manipulate it on either sentence (T3(Sent)) or word (T3(Word)) level. We consider two most representative NLP tasks: sentiment analysis and question answering (QA). Extensive experimental results and human studies show that T3 generated adversarial texts can successfully manipulate the NLP models to output the targeted incorrect answer without misleading the human. Moreover, we show that the generated adversarial texts have high transferability which enables the black-box attacks in practice. Our work sheds light on an effective and general way to examine the robustness of NLP models. Our code is publicly available at https://github.com/AI-secure/T3/.

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