A framework for generating informative answers for Question Answering systems

aut.embargoNoen_NZ
aut.thirdpc.containsNoen_NZ
dc.contributor.advisorNand, Parma
dc.contributor.advisorYeap, Wai (Albert)
dc.contributor.authorPerera, Arangalage Rivindu Prasanga
dc.date.accessioned2018-01-22T23:11:34Z
dc.date.available2018-01-22T23:11:34Z
dc.date.copyright2018
dc.date.issued2018
dc.date.updated2018-01-22T06:20:35Z
dc.description.abstractRecent trends in Question Answering (QA) systems have led to a proliferation of studies which have focused on building advanced QA systems which are able to compete with the QA ability of humans. To this effect, a large number of these systems have shifted to Question Answering over Linked Data (QALD). The use of Linked Data as the basis of knowledge representation by the QA systems has led to noticeable improvements in both recall and precision compared to the conventional, unstructured text based systems. However, answers from these systems are still not able to mimic human generated answers, which has been an ambition for Artificial Intelligence (AI) researchers for more than a decade. One of the two main reasons for the "machine feel" of the answers has been the inability of QA systems to present the answer as a fully constructed, natural language sentence. The second reason is that humans generally answer a question with elaboration containing additional contextual information, apart from the specific answer to the question. This aspect has been especially challenging for QA systems as it is difficult to source the contextual information, rank them and then formulate the information as multiple sentences in a form that emanates human generated text. Previous research has investigated answer presentation by summarizing unstructured text, selecting contextual information from a closed domain ontology, and using cooperative and user tailored answers, however, these studies have not dealt with the generation of an answer in natural language with additional contextual information. This thesis describes a framework, RealText, which presents an answer from a QA system in a natural language form, together with extraneous contextual information. This answer, referred hereafter as informative answer, comprises a sentence which presents the answer as a natural language sentence, and in addition, contains an elaboration of the entities contained in both the question and the answer. The information required to generate the elaborations was retrieved from DBpedia, which is an open domain Linked Data resource and is considered to be the nucleus for the ever-growing Linked Data cloud. Linked Data is represented in a structured form as a triple, and this enables the required information to be selected for the identified entities with no ambiguity compared to the use of unstructured text summarization which is prone to a high level of ambiguity. With the current rate of growth, Linked Data is set to become much more prevalent which will mean development of a lot more of Linked Data resources getting linked to DBpedia, thus making it a central hub for the Linked Data cloud. This would put architectures that use DBpedia as the knowledge source at an advantage. The generation of an elaboration paragraph based on structured information contained in the triples requires several steps. The triples firstly need to be lexicalized, which involves transformation of the individual triples into basic stand-alone sentences. These sentences then need to be further enhanced and meshed into a paragraph using linguistic tasks such as aggregation and referral expression generation. The RealText framework integrates these linguistic processes as used by humans to generate a paragraph consisting of multiple sentences. Additionally, the framework implements realization functions and inferences on gender, ontology class of an entity, inter alia, to further enhance the text to make it more akin to human generated text. We used the QALD evaluation campaign dataset which contains the question, the query, and the answer as the source data. Since we were working in the final answer presentation stage, extraction of the answer was out of the scope for this project. Additionally, the framework uses all of the triples associated with a given entity, hence does not focus on ranking triples. The list of triples used in the contextual information generation is provided by DBpedia which is the structured version of Wikipedia. The evaluation of research of this nature is challenging for two reasons; firstly there is no benchmark data available and secondly evaluation of natural text can only be done accurately by human evaluators which is expensive, both in terms of money and time. We evaluated the RealText framework based on three criteria; readability, accuracy, and informativeness. Measurement of these criteria is highly subjective and difficult to measure as definite scientific variables. It is far more challenging to implement automated systems to measure these criteria. To validate this research, we principally used human participants to evaluate the "naturalness" of the generated text under a condition in which the inter-annotator agreement was computed to make sure that there was a minimum threshold of agreement between the participants. In addition, we also investigated several automated metrics to see if anyone of them could correlate with the human evaluations. The results showed that more than 95% of the generated answers achieved an average rating above three out of five for all of the criteria. Furthermore, 39.02% of the generated answers achieved an average rating above four for the readability criteria, while the value for accuracy and informativeness were in the vicinity of 66%. Further, the investigation into the automated metrics showed that none of the metrics correlated with the human evaluations. In summary, this thesis presents a framework that would be able to generate multi sentence "natural text" based on a given set of entities by extracting the information from a linked data knowledge base such as DBpedia. The framework being presented is robust enough to be able to generate text for any given set of entities, hence would be extendable to any natural language generation task, such as description text generation for kiosks, dialogue systems for Intelligent Personal Assistants (IPA), patient summary generation in eHealth, and narrative generation in eLearning applications.en_NZ
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10292/11128
dc.language.isoenen_NZ
dc.publisherAuckland University of Technology
dc.rights.accessrightsOpenAccess
dc.subjectNatural Language Processingen_NZ
dc.subjectNatural Language Generationen_NZ
dc.subjectSemantic Weben_NZ
dc.subjectQuestion Answeringen_NZ
dc.subjectArtificial Intelligenceen_NZ
dc.subjectRealTexten_NZ
dc.titleA framework for generating informative answers for Question Answering systemsen_NZ
dc.typeThesisen_NZ
thesis.degree.grantorAuckland University of Technology
thesis.degree.levelDoctoral Theses
thesis.degree.nameDoctor of Philosophyen_NZ
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