CLSep 30, 2021

Semi-Supervised Text Classification via Self-Pretraining

arXiv:2109.15300v126 citationsHas Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This is an incremental improvement for semi-supervised learning in text classification, particularly for social media data.

The paper tackles semi-supervised text classification by introducing Self-Pretraining, a threshold-free method that addresses semantic drift and updates labels iteratively, achieving state-of-the-art performance on three social media datasets.

We present a neural semi-supervised learning model termed Self-Pretraining. Our model is inspired by the classic self-training algorithm. However, as opposed to self-training, Self-Pretraining is threshold-free, it can potentially update its belief about previously labeled documents, and can cope with the semantic drift problem. Self-Pretraining is iterative and consists of two classifiers. In each iteration, one classifier draws a random set of unlabeled documents and labels them. This set is used to initialize the second classifier, to be further trained by the set of labeled documents. The algorithm proceeds to the next iteration and the classifiers' roles are reversed. To improve the flow of information across the iterations and also to cope with the semantic drift problem, Self-Pretraining employs an iterative distillation process, transfers hypotheses across the iterations, utilizes a two-stage training model, uses an efficient learning rate schedule, and employs a pseudo-label transformation heuristic. We have evaluated our model in three publicly available social media datasets. Our experiments show that Self-Pretraining outperforms the existing state-of-the-art semi-supervised classifiers across multiple settings. Our code is available at https://github.com/p-karisani/self_pretraining.

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