Multi-Scale Feature and Metric Learning for Relation Extraction
This work addresses relation extraction for natural language processing, offering incremental improvements by enhancing feature aggregation and metric learning.
The paper tackled the limitations of existing relation extraction methods by proposing a multi-scale feature and metric learning framework, which significantly outperformed state-of-the-art approaches on three real-world datasets.
Existing methods in relation extraction have leveraged the lexical features in the word sequence and the syntactic features in the parse tree. Though effective, the lexical features extracted from the successive word sequence may introduce some noise that has little or no meaningful content. Meanwhile, the syntactic features are usually encoded via graph convolutional networks which have restricted receptive field. To address the above limitations, we propose a multi-scale feature and metric learning framework for relation extraction. Specifically, we first develop a multi-scale convolutional neural network to aggregate the non-successive mainstays in the lexical sequence. We also design a multi-scale graph convolutional network which can increase the receptive field towards specific syntactic roles. Moreover, we present a multi-scale metric learning paradigm to exploit both the feature-level relation between lexical and syntactic features and the sample-level relation between instances with the same or different classes. We conduct extensive experiments on three real world datasets for various types of relation extraction tasks. The results demonstrate that our model significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art approaches.