Why Do Neural Language Models Still Need Commonsense Knowledge to Handle Semantic Variations in Question Answering?
This addresses a critical bottleneck for improving robustness in natural language processing applications, but it is incremental as it builds on existing diagnostic and enhancement approaches.
The paper tackles the problem that masked neural language models (MNLMs) lack sufficient commonsense knowledge, leading to vulnerabilities in question answering tasks with semantic variations, and finds that using external commonsense knowledge repositories can help overcome these limitations in controlled experiments.
Many contextualized word representations are now learned by intricate neural network models, such as masked neural language models (MNLMs) which are made up of huge neural network structures and trained to restore the masked text. Such representations demonstrate superhuman performance in some reading comprehension (RC) tasks which extract a proper answer in the context given a question. However, identifying the detailed knowledge trained in MNLMs is challenging owing to numerous and intermingled model parameters. This paper provides new insights and empirical analyses on commonsense knowledge included in pretrained MNLMs. First, we use a diagnostic test that evaluates whether commonsense knowledge is properly trained in MNLMs. We observe that a large proportion of commonsense knowledge is not appropriately trained in MNLMs and MNLMs do not often understand the semantic meaning of relations accurately. In addition, we find that the MNLM-based RC models are still vulnerable to semantic variations that require commonsense knowledge. Finally, we discover the fundamental reason why some knowledge is not trained. We further suggest that utilizing an external commonsense knowledge repository can be an effective solution. We exemplify the possibility to overcome the limitations of the MNLM-based RC models by enriching text with the required knowledge from an external commonsense knowledge repository in controlled experiments.