Knowledge Infused Decoding
Pre-trained language models (LMs) have been shown to memorize a substantial amount of knowledge from the pre-training corpora; however, they are still limited in recalling factually correct knowledge given a certain context. Hence, they tend to suffer from counterfactual or hallucinatory generation...
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
06.04.2022
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Pre-trained language models (LMs) have been shown to memorize a substantial
amount of knowledge from the pre-training corpora; however, they are still
limited in recalling factually correct knowledge given a certain context.
Hence, they tend to suffer from counterfactual or hallucinatory generation when
used in knowledge-intensive natural language generation (NLG) tasks. Recent
remedies to this problem focus on modifying either the pre-training or task
fine-tuning objectives to incorporate knowledge, which normally require
additional costly training or architecture modification of LMs for practical
applications. We present Knowledge Infused Decoding (KID) -- a novel decoding
algorithm for generative LMs, which dynamically infuses external knowledge into
each step of the LM decoding. Specifically, we maintain a local knowledge
memory based on the current context, interacting with a dynamically created
external knowledge trie, and continuously update the local memory as a
knowledge-aware constraint to guide decoding via reinforcement learning. On six
diverse knowledge-intensive NLG tasks, task-agnostic LMs (e.g., GPT-2 and BART)
armed with KID outperform many task-optimized state-of-the-art models, and show
particularly strong performance in few-shot scenarios over seven related
knowledge-infusion techniques. Human evaluation confirms KID's ability to
generate more relevant and factual language for the input context when compared
with multiple baselines. Finally, KID also alleviates exposure bias and
provides stable generation quality when generating longer sequences. Code for
KID is available at https://github.com/microsoft/KID. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2204.03084 |