A Neural-Symbolic Approach to Natural Language Understanding
This addresses a key bottleneck in NLU for applications requiring robust reasoning, though it is an incremental improvement by integrating symbolic processing.
The paper tackles the problem of logical reasoning in natural language understanding by proposing a neural-symbolic framework, which significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods in question answering and natural language inference tasks requiring numerical reasoning.
Deep neural networks, empowered by pre-trained language models, have achieved remarkable results in natural language understanding (NLU) tasks. However, their performances can drastically deteriorate when logical reasoning is needed. This is because NLU in principle depends on not only analogical reasoning, which deep neural networks are good at, but also logical reasoning. According to the dual-process theory, analogical reasoning and logical reasoning are respectively carried out by System 1 and System 2 in the human brain. Inspired by the theory, we present a novel framework for NLU called Neural-Symbolic Processor (NSP), which performs analogical reasoning based on neural processing and logical reasoning based on both neural and symbolic processing. As a case study, we conduct experiments on two NLU tasks, question answering (QA) and natural language inference (NLI), when numerical reasoning (a type of logical reasoning) is necessary. The experimental results show that our method significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods in both tasks.