Metadata-Induced Contrastive Learning for Zero-Shot Multi-Label Text Classification
This addresses the problem of costly and long-tailed labeled data for large-scale multi-label text classification, offering a zero-shot solution that is competitive with supervised approaches.
The paper tackles zero-shot multi-label text classification by proposing a metadata-induced contrastive learning method that uses document metadata to derive similar pairs, achieving performance on par with supervised methods trained on large labeled datasets and improving prediction of infrequent labels.
Large-scale multi-label text classification (LMTC) aims to associate a document with its relevant labels from a large candidate set. Most existing LMTC approaches rely on massive human-annotated training data, which are often costly to obtain and suffer from a long-tailed label distribution (i.e., many labels occur only a few times in the training set). In this paper, we study LMTC under the zero-shot setting, which does not require any annotated documents with labels and only relies on label surface names and descriptions. To train a classifier that calculates the similarity score between a document and a label, we propose a novel metadata-induced contrastive learning (MICoL) method. Different from previous text-based contrastive learning techniques, MICoL exploits document metadata (e.g., authors, venues, and references of research papers), which are widely available on the Web, to derive similar document-document pairs. Experimental results on two large-scale datasets show that: (1) MICoL significantly outperforms strong zero-shot text classification and contrastive learning baselines; (2) MICoL is on par with the state-of-the-art supervised metadata-aware LMTC method trained on 10K-200K labeled documents; and (3) MICoL tends to predict more infrequent labels than supervised methods, thus alleviates the deteriorated performance on long-tailed labels.