Break It Down: A Question Understanding Benchmark
Author(s) -
Tomer Wolfson,
Mor Geva,
Ankit Gupta,
Matt Gardner,
Yoav Goldberg,
Daniel Deutch,
Jonathan Berant
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
transactions of the association for computational linguistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2307-387X
DOI - 10.1162/tacl_a_00309
Subject(s) - computer science , question answering , pipeline (software) , crowdsourcing , natural language processing , natural language , artificial intelligence , copying , benchmark (surveying) , parsing , representation (politics) , sequence (biology) , dual (grammatical number) , annotation , open domain , meaning (existential) , domain (mathematical analysis) , information retrieval , programming language , world wide web , linguistics , mathematics , law , psychotherapist , mathematical analysis , biology , genetics , psychology , geodesy , political science , politics , geography , philosophy
Understanding natural language questions entails the ability to break down a question into the requisite steps for computing its answer. In this work, we introduce a Question Decomposition Meaning Representation (QDMR) for questions. QDMR constitutes the ordered list of steps, expressed through natural language, that are necessary for answering a question. We develop a crowdsourcing pipeline, showing that quality QDMRs can be annotated at scale, and release the Break dataset, containing over 83K pairs of questions and their QDMRs. We demonstrate the utility of QDMR by showing that (a) it can be used to improve open-domain question answering on the HotpotQA dataset, (b) it can be deterministically converted to a pseudo-SQL formal language, which can alleviate annotation in semantic parsing applications. Last, we use Break to train a sequence-to-sequence model with copying that parses questions into QDMR structures, and show that it substantially outperforms several natural baselines.
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