@inproceedings{pandit-hou-2021-probing,
title = "Probing for Bridging Inference in Transformer Language Models",
author = "Pandit, Onkar and
Hou, Yufang",
editor = "Toutanova, Kristina and
Rumshisky, Anna and
Zettlemoyer, Luke and
Hakkani-Tur, Dilek and
Beltagy, Iz and
Bethard, Steven and
Cotterell, Ryan and
Chakraborty, Tanmoy and
Zhou, Yichao",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2021 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies",
month = jun,
year = "2021",
address = "Online",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/fix-sig-urls/2021.naacl-main.327/",
doi = "10.18653/v1/2021.naacl-main.327",
pages = "4153--4163",
abstract = "We probe pre-trained transformer language models for bridging inference. We first investigate individual attention heads in BERT and observe that attention heads at higher layers prominently focus on bridging relations in-comparison with the lower and middle layers, also, few specific attention heads concentrate consistently on bridging. More importantly, we consider language models as a whole in our second approach where bridging anaphora resolution is formulated as a masked token prediction task (Of-Cloze test). Our formulation produces optimistic results without any fine-tuning, which indicates that pre-trained language models substantially capture bridging inference. Our further investigation shows that the distance between anaphor-antecedent and the context provided to language models play an important role in the inference."
}
Markdown (Informal)
[Probing for Bridging Inference in Transformer Language Models](https://preview.aclanthology.org/fix-sig-urls/2021.naacl-main.327/) (Pandit & Hou, NAACL 2021)
ACL
- Onkar Pandit and Yufang Hou. 2021. Probing for Bridging Inference in Transformer Language Models. In Proceedings of the 2021 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies, pages 4153–4163, Online. Association for Computational Linguistics.