9,036 research outputs found
Unsupervised Alignment-based Iterative Evidence Retrieval for Multi-hop Question Answering
Evidence retrieval is a critical stage of question answering (QA), necessary
not only to improve performance, but also to explain the decisions of the
corresponding QA method. We introduce a simple, fast, and unsupervised
iterative evidence retrieval method, which relies on three ideas: (a) an
unsupervised alignment approach to soft-align questions and answers with
justification sentences using only GloVe embeddings, (b) an iterative process
that reformulates queries focusing on terms that are not covered by existing
justifications, which (c) a stopping criterion that terminates retrieval when
the terms in the given question and candidate answers are covered by the
retrieved justifications. Despite its simplicity, our approach outperforms all
the previous methods (including supervised methods) on the evidence selection
task on two datasets: MultiRC and QASC. When these evidence sentences are fed
into a RoBERTa answer classification component, we achieve state-of-the-art QA
performance on these two datasets.Comment: Accepted at ACL 2020 as a long conference pape
Detecting and Explaining Causes From Text For a Time Series Event
Explaining underlying causes or effects about events is a challenging but
valuable task. We define a novel problem of generating explanations of a time
series event by (1) searching cause and effect relationships of the time series
with textual data and (2) constructing a connecting chain between them to
generate an explanation. To detect causal features from text, we propose a
novel method based on the Granger causality of time series between features
extracted from text such as N-grams, topics, sentiments, and their composition.
The generation of the sequence of causal entities requires a commonsense
causative knowledge base with efficient reasoning. To ensure good
interpretability and appropriate lexical usage we combine symbolic and neural
representations, using a neural reasoning algorithm trained on commonsense
causal tuples to predict the next cause step. Our quantitative and human
analysis show empirical evidence that our method successfully extracts
meaningful causality relationships between time series with textual features
and generates appropriate explanation between them.Comment: Accepted at EMNLP 201
Concept-based Interactive Query Expansion Support Tool (CIQUEST)
This report describes a three-year project (2000-03) undertaken in the Information Studies
Department at The University of Sheffield and funded by Resource, The Council for
Museums, Archives and Libraries. The overall aim of the research was to provide user
support for query formulation and reformulation in searching large-scale textual resources
including those of the World Wide Web. More specifically the objectives were: to investigate
and evaluate methods for the automatic generation and organisation of concepts derived from
retrieved document sets, based on statistical methods for term weighting; and to conduct
user-based evaluations on the understanding, presentation and retrieval effectiveness of
concept structures in selecting candidate terms for interactive query expansion.
The TREC test collection formed the basis for the seven evaluative experiments conducted in
the course of the project. These formed four distinct phases in the project plan. In the first
phase, a series of experiments was conducted to investigate further techniques for concept
derivation and hierarchical organisation and structure. The second phase was concerned with
user-based validation of the concept structures. Results of phases 1 and 2 informed on the
design of the test system and the user interface was developed in phase 3. The final phase
entailed a user-based summative evaluation of the CiQuest system.
The main findings demonstrate that concept hierarchies can effectively be generated from
sets of retrieved documents and displayed to searchers in a meaningful way. The approach
provides the searcher with an overview of the contents of the retrieved documents, which in
turn facilitates the viewing of documents and selection of the most relevant ones. Concept
hierarchies are a good source of terms for query expansion and can improve precision. The
extraction of descriptive phrases as an alternative source of terms was also effective. With
respect to presentation, cascading menus were easy to browse for selecting terms and for
viewing documents. In conclusion the project dissemination programme and future work are
outlined
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