@inproceedings{parikh-etal-2023-exploring,
title = "Exploring Zero and Few-shot Techniques for Intent Classification",
author = "Parikh, Soham and
Tiwari, Mitul and
Tumbade, Prashil and
Vohra, Quaizar",
editor = "Sitaram, Sunayana and
Beigman Klebanov, Beata and
Williams, Jason D",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 61st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 5: Industry Track)",
month = jul,
year = "2023",
address = "Toronto, Canada",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/fix-sig-urls/2023.acl-industry.71/",
doi = "10.18653/v1/2023.acl-industry.71",
pages = "744--751",
abstract = "Conversational NLU providers often need to scale to thousands of intent-classification models where new customers often face the cold-start problem. Scaling to so many customers puts a constraint on storage space as well. In this paper, we explore four different zero and few-shot intent classification approaches with this low-resource constraint: 1) domain adaptation, 2) data augmentation, 3) zero-shot intent classification using descriptions large language models (LLMs), and 4) parameter-efficient fine-tuning of instruction-finetuned language models. Our results show that all these approaches are effective to different degrees in low-resource settings. Parameter-efficient fine-tuning using T-few recipe on Flan-T5 yields the best performance even with just one sample per intent. We also show that the zero-shot method of prompting LLMs using intent descriptions is also very competitive."
}
Markdown (Informal)
[Exploring Zero and Few-shot Techniques for Intent Classification](https://preview.aclanthology.org/fix-sig-urls/2023.acl-industry.71/) (Parikh et al., ACL 2023)
ACL
- Soham Parikh, Mitul Tiwari, Prashil Tumbade, and Quaizar Vohra. 2023. Exploring Zero and Few-shot Techniques for Intent Classification. In Proceedings of the 61st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 5: Industry Track), pages 744–751, Toronto, Canada. Association for Computational Linguistics.